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Gert Van Assche, Axel Dignass, Julian Panes, Laurent Beaugerie, John Karagiannis, Mathieu Allez, Thomas Ochsenkühn, Tim Orchard, Gerhard Rogler, Edouard Louis, Limas Kupcinskas, Gerassimos Mantzaris, Simon Travis, Eduard Stange, for the European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation (ECCO), The second European evidence-based Consensus on the diagnosis and management of Crohn's disease: Definitions and diagnosis, Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, Volume 4, Issue 1, February 2010, Pages 7–27, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crohns.2009.12.003
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1 Introduction
Crohn's disease is a lifelong disease arising from an interaction between genetic and environmental factors, but observed predominantly in developed countries of the world. The precise aetiology is unknown and therefore a causal therapy is not yet available. Within Europe there is a distinct North–South gradient, but the incidence appears to have increased in Southern countries in recent years.1 Many patients live with a considerable symptom burden despite medical treatment in the hope that the aetiology of the disease will shortly be revealed and curative therapies emerge. Since it is uncertain that the precise pathogenesis of Crohn's disease will be revealed anytime soon, clinicians have to advise patients on the basis of information available today rather than an unknown future. Despite a multiplicity of randomised trials there will always be many questions that can only be answered by the exercise of judgement and opinion. This leads to differences in practice between clinicians, which may be brought into sharp relief by differences in emphasis between countries.