Ulcerative Colitis (UC) is a chronic, non-specific intestinal inflammatory disease of unknown cause, featuring abdominal pain, diarrhea, and bloody stools. Endoscopy shows diffuse, continuous lesions with erosion and shallow ulcers, worst in the rectum and diminishing proximally. Current treatments (aminosalicylates, corticosteroids, immunosuppressants, biologics, small molecule drugs) are not curative. Endoscopic mucosal healing is a key treatment goal, improving steroid-free remission, reducing colectomy rates, recurrence, hospitalization, and colorectal cancer risk. Common endoscopic scoring systems: Baron score (poor consistency), Mayo Endoscopic Score (MES, simple but lacks prognostic info), and Ulcerative Colitis Endoscopic Severity Index (UCEIS, more detailed and consistent but cumbersome). Disease extent is important for severity, as proximal extension increases relapse, treatment escalation, and cancer risk. However, MES and UCEIS assess only the worst segment, underestimating total disease burden. Other scores (UCCIS, MMES, DUBLIN) attempt to incorporate lesion extent but have limitations (small samples, lack of validation, unclear severity cutoffs). Data on short-/medium-term endoscopic changes and long-term outcomes are scarce. We therefore propose a new endoscopic scoring system, the CAT-DESIRE score, aiming to evaluate its reliability, validity, and predictive role in medium-/long-term prognosis and treatment response, providing a simple, accurate tool for assessing disease burden and guiding clinical decisions.
Age range
18 Years – 75 Years
Sex
ALL
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AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
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Generated to help you prepare — always confirm anything about your own eligibility and care with the study team and your doctor.
The trial coordinator is the person who runs the study day to day. These cover the practical side — logistics, costs, and what taking part would actually mean for your life. The study team confirms whether you meet the criteria; these are questions to ask, not a sign you qualify.
A starting point for the conversation — always confirm anything about your own eligibility, costs, and care with the study team and your doctor.
The two clear colonoscopy images before and after the treatment
Timeframe: Three months after receiving any standard UC treatment , including mesalazine, steroids, immunosuppressants, biologics and small molecule drugs, etc.