and PV Desmond have no conflicts of interest to declare. P De Cruz has received travel grant support from Abbott and Schering-Plough. MA Kamm has acted as an advisor to Abbott and Janssen, has received research support from Abbott, and has acted as a speaker at symposiums sponsored by Abbott and Janssen. A Hamilton has received an educational grant from Abbott. D Liew has served on advisory boards and received research grants from Abbott. IC Lawrance has been on an advisory board for Abbott and Janssen, a speaker for Abbott and Janssen, and has held research and travel grants from Abbott and Janssen. JM Andrews has been an advisory board member for both Janssen and Abbott, spoken for both Abbott and Janssen, received research funds from both Abbott and Janssen, and received travel grants from both Abbott and Janssen. PA Bampton has been on advisory boards for Janssen and Abbott, has received research funding from Abbott, and travel sponsorship from both Abbott and Janssen. PR Gibson has received consulting fees from Abbott, Janssen, and Schering-Plough; research support from Abbott; and payments for lectures from Abbott and Janssen. FA Macrae has been on an advisory board to Janssen, has received travel grants from Abbott, and has received clinical research support from Janssen, Abbott and MSD. W Selby has been on an advisory board for Abbott. SJ Bell has received travel assistance from Abbott. SJ Brown has received travel support and speaker fees from both Abbott and Janssen. WR Connell has been on advisory board for Janssen and a speaker for Abbott and Janssen. AS Day has been an M A N U S C R I P T A C C E P T E D ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT advisor to Janssen. RB Gearry has been on an advisory board for Abbott and Janssen, a speaker for Abbott and Janssen, and held research, educational and travel grants from Abbott and Janssen.
Evolution of treatment targets in IBD has increased the need for objective monitoring of disease activity to guide therapeutic strategy. Although mucosal healing is the current target of therapy in IBD, endoscopy is invasive, expensive and unappealing to patients. GI ultrasound (GIUS) represents a non-invasive modality to assess disease activity in IBD. It is accurate, cost-effective and reproducible. GIUS can be performed at the point of care without specific patient preparation so as to facilitate clinical decision-making. As compared with ileocolonoscopy and other imaging modalities (CT and MRI), GIUS is accurate in diagnosing IBD, detecting complications of disease including fistulae, strictures and abscesses, monitoring disease activity and detecting postoperative disease recurrence. International groups increasingly recognise GIUS as a valuable tool with paradigm-changing application in the management of IBD; however, uptake outside parts of continental Europe has been slow and GIUS is underused in many countries. The aim of this review is to present a pragmatic guide to the positioning of GIUS in IBD clinical practice, providing evidence for use, algorithms for integration into practice, training pathways and a strategic implementation framework.
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