Intestinal ultrasound (IUS) enables frequent, noninvasive assessment of inflammatory activity in ulcerative colitis and can support treat-to-target decisions without bowel preparation. Evidence from prospective cohorts indicates that early IUS changes within 1 to 2 weeks-particularly reductions in bowel wall thickness and color Doppler vascularity-are associated with shortterm response and can guide timely treatment optimization during induction. Follow-up assessments at 6 to 12 weeks further improve risk stratification by reassessing bowel wall thickness and Doppler vascularity, including composite indices such as the Milan Ultrasound Criteria, which correlate with endoscopic outcomes and subsequent medium- to long-term clinical events (e.g., relapse and colectomy). This review synthesizes the most reproducible IUS parameters and proposes a practical, time-windowed monitoring approach integrating IUS with symptoms, biomarkers, and endoscopy, whereby assessments within 1-2 weeks and again at 6-12 weeks provide actionable information to accelerate induction optimization and anticipate later outcomes in ulcerative colitis.
Sagami et al. (Mon,) studied this question.