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Does Rifaximin Offer Any Promise in Crohn's Disease in Remission and Concurrent Irritable Bowel Syndrome-like Symptoms?

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Specialty General Medicine
Date 2021 Jan 12
PMID 33429768
Citations 3
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Abstract

Microbiota plays an important role in many diseases including inflammatory bowel diseases. Inflammatory bowel disease patients can have concurrent irritable bowel syndrome symptoms similar to those associated with a flare. The potential role of gut dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease provides a rationale for treating such patients with rifaximin. This study aimed to assess the efficacy of rifaximin in the management of irritable bowel syndrome-like symptoms (bloating, abdominal pain, stool consistency) and quality of life in patients with Crohn's disease in remission.The present study included 86 patients with Crohn's disease in remission (fecal calprotectin <50 μg/g, C-reactive protein <0.5 mg/dL, simple endoscopic score for Crohn's disease <2) and associated irritable bowel syndrome-like symptoms (bloating, abdominal pain, diarrhea). These patients were randomly assigned to rifaximin treatment group (44 patients) and the control group (42 patients). Besides the baseline inflammatory bowel disease treatment and antispasmodics (as needed), patients in the rifaximin treatment group received 3 repeated courses of treatment, each course being represented by 1200 mg/d of rifaximin for 10 days and 20 days free of treatment (3 months consecutively); patients in the control group also received antispamodics as needed and were observed for 3 months.Monthly analyses of bloating score, abdominal pain score, stool consistency score, and quality of life score showed significant improvement after treatment in the rifaximin group in contrast with control group. Significantly more patients in the rifaximin group than in the control group met the criteria for adequate improvement of bloating score after 3 months of treatment (59.09% vs 19.04%, P = .01), adequate improvement of abdominal pain score (54.5% vs 21.4%, P = .04), stool consistency score (34.09% vs 14.2%, P = .03), and quality of life score (70.4% vs 21.4%, P < .001).Rifaximin in a dose of 1200 mg/d, 10 d/mo, 3 months consecutively is an effective medication for concurrent irritable bowel syndrome-like symptoms in patients with Crohn's disease in remission.

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