Shen Bo
Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease and the Global Integrated Colorectal Surgery and IBD Interventional Endoscopy, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York Presbyterian Hospital, 161 Ft Washington Ave, New York, 10032, NY, USA.
Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2025 Sep 29;27(1):64. doi: 10.1007/s11894-025-01014-1.
Complicated Crohn's disease in the small bowel is often associated with structural complications, particularly strictures. Endoscopy plays a key role in the diagnosis, disease monitoring, and therapy of small bowel CD. This article will provide state-of-the-art endoscopic treatment modalities for small bowel complications in CD.
Endoscopic therapy for small bowel disease can be delivered through upper endoscopy, push enteroscopy, ileocolonoscopy, device-assisted enteroscopy, intraoperative enteroscopy, and ileoscopy. In addition to persistent medical therapy, endoscopic treatment is performed using bare- or drug-coated balloon dilation, electrocision, and mechanical stricturectomy. Isolated ileocecal valve CD with associated stricture and adjacent fistulas comprises a unique phenotype of CD, mimicking the clinical presentation and disease course of achalasia at the gastroesophageal junction. Ileocecal valve CD can be treated with stricturectomy and fistulotomy. Endoscopy also has a major role in the treatment of surgery-associated anastomotic complications (such as stricture, bleeding, and leaks). Endoscopic treatment should be attempted in patients with short (<4-5) small bowel strictures on top of medical therapy. Isolated ileocecal valve CD represents a unique phenotype of CD consisting of inflammation, stricture, and fistula at and around the valve, which is amenable for endoscopic therapy.