S5011 Isolated Jejunal Stenosis as a Rare Presentation of Crohn’s Disease in the Setting of Latent Tuberculosis Infection
Sarah Herrera Mercedes, Jessica Strzepka, Atsushi Sakuraba, Dauris Rosario
The American Journal of Gastroenterology · 2025-10
Abstract
Introduction: Of the many possible etiologies of intestinal strictures, one of the most common in North America is Crohn’s Disease (CD). Isolated jejunal strictures are a rare presentation of CD in around 1% of cases. Ruling out alternate etiologies such as infections (including tuberculosis [TB]), ischemia, among others, is essential. We present a rare case of CD as an isolated jejunal stricture in the setting of untreated latent TB infection (LTBI). Case Description/Methods: A 62-year-old woman, presented with a 3-month history of abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and weight loss. She was hemodynamically stable. Laboratory values were significant for leukocytosis at 12 K/uL elevated C-reactive protein at 8 mg/L, normal lactate and a positive QuantiFERON® gold TB test. CT angiography revealed left lower quadrant enteritis and patent abdominal vasculature. Upper endoscopy and colonoscopy were unremarkable. Single balloon enteroscopy revealed deep ulcerations in the mid-jejunum with severe intrinsic stenosis. Biopsies showed mildly active enteritis and ulceration, and was negative for granulomas or acid-fast bacilli, and mycobacterium TB polymerase chain reaction testing. Chest imaging was normal. A 6-month course of 300 mg isoniazid daily was initiated for LTBI. After 2 weeks, prednisone taper was initiated at 40 mg. After 4 weeks, 300 mg vedolizumab (VDZ) was started at 0, 2 and 6 weeks then every 8 weeks, later increased to every 4 weeks. C-reactive protein was 5.7 mg/L at 3 months and 2.9 mg/L at 8 months. Repeat enteroscopy was completed at 16 months and showed mild jejunal narrowing, pale mucosa and previous scarring, otherwise normal mucosa. Additionally, pathology showed focal erosion but otherwise normal mucosa. Discussion: This case highlights the diagnostic and management complexities of an isolated jejunal stricture diagnosed as CD and untreated LTBI. Active TB was ruled out, followed by initiation of LTBI therapy prior to immunosuppression. Despite nonspecific histologic findings, ruling out of alternate etiologies determined CD diagnosis. CD is further supported by adequate treatment response. Guidelines recommend LTBI treatment before IS, exact time course recommendations are limited. In our case, steroids were initiated after 2 weeks and VDZ was initiated after 4 weeks of LTBI therapy. VDZ was chosen over anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy to minimize LTBI reactivation risk. We emphasize the importance of personalized treatment regimens and careful consideration of risks and benefits.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Gastroenterology
- Internal medicine
- Colonoscopy
- Enteroscopy
- Enteritis
- Etiology
- Ileitis
- Tuberculosis
- Latent tuberculosis
- INTESTINAL TUBERCULOSIS
- Abdominal pain
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Leukocytosis
- Stenosis
- Surgery
- Sarcoidosis
- Prednisone
- Vomiting