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Indeterminate colitis & IBD-unclassified (IBDu)

When colitis doesn’t fit neatly into ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s — what that means for diagnosis, treatment, and pouch surgery.

Sometimes a chronic colitis has features of both ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD), and a confident label can’t be assigned even after a complete workup. When that happens before surgery, clinicians often call it IBD-unclassified (IBDu); when it’s a pathologist’s reading of a removed colon, the older term is indeterminate colitis. Roughly 1 in 10 people with IBD colitis fall into this group, and the picture can sharpen over time.

This page is being authored Detailed content is being prepared by Dr. Holubar and reviewed for accuracy. Section headings below outline the structure; full content will be published soon. For now, the most reliable resources are linked at the bottom of this page.

What is indeterminate colitis / IBDu?

“Indeterminate colitis” and “IBD-unclassified” describe a chronic inflammatory bowel disease confined to the colon that cannot be definitively classified as UC or CD after a full evaluation — clinical history, colonoscopy with biopsies, imaging of the small bowel, and exclusion of infection. The two terms are used in slightly different settings, but both mean the same thing for the patient: the colitis is real, but it doesn’t read cleanly as one disease or the other.

Key fact: IBDu is not a separate disease — it is a working label for colitis that overlaps UC and CD. Most people with IBDu are managed much like UC, while the team watches for features that point toward CD.

How IBDu differs from UC and CD

How it’s diagnosed — and why it can change For clinicians

IBDu is a diagnosis of careful exclusion: rule out infection and other mimics, assess the small bowel (often with MR enterography), and review endoscopic and histologic patterns. Serologic markers (such as ASCA and pANCA) have limited discriminatory value and should not be relied on alone. Because the phenotype can shift, the label is best treated as provisional and revisited at follow-up rather than fixed at first diagnosis.

Treatment approach

Day-to-day treatment of IBDu generally mirrors the treatment of ulcerative colitis — the same families of medications are used to control inflammation and maintain remission. If the disease later behaves like Crohn’s, the plan is adjusted accordingly. The goal is the same as in any IBD: durable remission, mucosal healing, and avoiding complications.

Pouch surgery when the diagnosis is IBDu

If medical therapy no longer controls the colitis, removing the colon with an ileal pouch–anal anastomosis (J-pouch / IPAA) can be offered to selected people with IBDu — it is not automatically ruled out the way a confirmed Crohn’s diagnosis often is.

Why volume matters: outcomes for complex IBD pouch surgery are best at high-volume centers. The ACS NSQIP IBD Collaborative tracks these outcomes systematically across centers.

What to ask your doctor

Ask about IBDu

Ask a question about indeterminate colitis and IBD-unclassified. Answers are grounded in the medical literature.

Educational information only — not a substitute for advice from your own care team. In an emergency call 911.

External resources