The Overlap Between Crohn's Disease and Intestinal Tuberculosis: A Never-Ending Story.
Sergiu Marian Cazacu, Costin Teodor Streba, Cristian Constantin, Claudiu Marinel Ionele, Ion Rogoveanu, Alexandru Valentin Popescu, Mirela-Marinela Florescu
Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) · 2026-04
Abstract
The prevalence of Crohn's disease has increased over the last few decades, even in developing countries, whereas that of intestinal tuberculosis has decreased, which places both diseases at an epidemiological crossroads. Crohn's disease and intestinal tuberculosis share many clinical, endoscopic, imaging, and pathological features, which sometimes make differential diagnosis very difficult; an accurate diagnosis is, however, very important since an erroneous treatment can worsen the evolution or delay proper therapy. The association between past TB infection and Crohn's disease can make the diagnosis especially hard. This review summarizes current data on specific features that allow differentiation between Crohn's disease and intestinal tuberculosis, paying particular attention to the microbiome, clinical signs, endoscopy, cross-sectional imaging, bacteriological, and immunological findings detailed. The importance of computerized models and scores for the differentiation is also detailed, because common features may make the differentiation based on a single criterion difficult.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Crohn Disease
- Tuberculosis, Gastrointestinal
- Diagnosis, Differential