HIV infection is associated with a less aggressive phenotype of inflammatory bowel disease. A multicenter study of the ENEIDA registry.
Margalida CalafatCarles SuriaFrancisco Mesonero GismeroRuth De FranciscoCarmen Yagüe CaballeroLuisa Carmen de la Peña-NegroAlejandro Hernández-CambaAinhoa MarcéBeatriz GallegoNoelia Martín-VicenteMontserrat RiveroMarisa IborraIvan GuerraMarta Carrillo-PalauLucía MaderoBeatriz BurgueñoDavid MonfortGisela TorresMarta TellerJuan Ángel Ferrer RosiquePablo Vega VillaamilCristina RoigAngel Ponferrada-DiazElena Betoré GlaríaYamile ZabanaJavier P GisbertDavid BusquetsNoelia AlcaideBlau CampsJesús LegidoMaria González-VivoMarta Maia Bosca-WattsIsabel Pérez-MartínezDiego Casas DezaJordi GuardiolaLaura Arranz HernándezMercedes Navarro-LlavatCarla J Gargallo-PuyueloFiorella CañeteMiriam MañosaEugeni Domènechnull nullPublished in: The American journal of gastroenterology (2024)
HIV infection appears to be associated with a less aggressive phenotype of IBD and a lesser use of non-biological therapies and biologicals but entails a greater risk of developing OI.
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