P609 An IBD dermatology multidisciplinary clinic: A single tertiary centre experience
N. Levy1, H. Matz2, N. Maharshak3, A. Waizbard4
1Tel Aviv Sourasky medical center, Internal medicine I, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2Tel Aviv Sourasky medical center, Department of Dermatology, Tel Aviv, Israel, 3Tel Aviv Sourasky medical center, Department of Gastroenterology and Liver diseases, Tel Aviv, Israel, 4Sanz Medical Center Laniado Hospital, Department of Gastroenterology, Netanya, Israel
Background
Dermatologic manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are common and cause a significant burden on patients’ quality of life. More than 10% of IBD patients present cutaneous manifestation at the time of diagnosis; however, less than one in 10 IBD patients seeks dermatologic care. In up to 30% of cases, intense skin reactions mandate treatment discontinuation. There is growing evidence that the treatment of IBD patients improves when given by a multidisciplinary team yet data on combined IBD dermatology clinics is scarce. The aim was to describe our experience in this approach.
Methods
A retrospective descriptive study of a 2-year multidisciplinary IBD-dermatology clinic in a tertiary hospital in Israel, performed by an IBD expert and a senior dermatologist.
Results
Eighty-six visits (52 patients, of whom 50% males) were documented. Patients included Crohn’s disease (
Visits included preventive measures (mole assessment), diagnostic tests (skin biopsy) and therapeutic procedures (needle cauterisation, phototherapy). In 65.1% (56/86) of visits– topical treatment was advised. Among 21 re-visits, skin improvement was observed in 57.1%. Treatment-related skin symptoms were suspected in 34.6% of patients (18/52): in 38.8% (7/18), biological treatment was changed and in 13 patients, topical therapy was added, resulting in dermatologic improvement in 12 patients.
Conclusion
The IBD-dermatology clinic appears to improve IBD patient care. This clinic sets a new standard of treatment for IBD patients with dermatological issues