OBJECTIVE: To determine differences in phenotype and treatment among hospitalized elderly and young patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and the utility of International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD)-10 codes in hospital discharge abstracts in diagnosing IBD in elderly patients. METHODS: A large Canadian health region hospitalization discharge database was used to identify elderly (>65 years of age) and young (19 to 50 years of age) patients with IBD admitted between April 1, 2007 and March 31, 2012, and a random sample of elderly patients with other colonic conditions. Medical records were reviewed to confirm IBD diagnosis and extract clinical information. The characteristics of elderly versus young hospitalized IBD patients and accuracy of ICD-10 IBD discharge codes in the elderly were assessed. RESULTS: One hundred forty-three elderly and 82 young patients with an IBD discharge diagnosis, and 135 elderly patients with other gastrointestinal discharge diagnoses were included. Elderly IBD patients were less likely to have ileocolonic Crohn disease (21.4% versus 50.9%; P=0.001), more likely to be prescribed 5-aminosalicylates (61% versus 43%; P=0.04), and less likely to be prescribed biologics (6% versus 21%; P=0.016) or immunomodulators (21% versus 42%; P=0.01). The sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value of a single ICD code for CD were 98%, 96% and 94%, respectively, and for ulcerative colitis (UC) were 98%, 92% and 70%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment approaches in elderly patients were different than in younger IBD patients despite having disease sufficiently severe to require hospitalization. While less accurate in UC, a single ICD-10 IBD code was sufficient to identify elderly CD and UC hospitalized patients.
OBJECTIVE: To determine differences in phenotype and treatment among hospitalized elderly and young patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and the utility of International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD)-10 codes in hospital discharge abstracts in diagnosing IBD in elderly patients. METHODS: A large Canadian health region hospitalization discharge database was used to identify elderly (>65 years of age) and young (19 to 50 years of age) patients with IBD admitted between April 1, 2007 and March 31, 2012, and a random sample of elderly patients with other colonic conditions. Medical records were reviewed to confirm IBD diagnosis and extract clinical information. The characteristics of elderly versus young hospitalized IBD patients and accuracy of ICD-10 IBD discharge codes in the elderly were assessed. RESULTS: One hundred forty-three elderly and 82 young patients with an IBD discharge diagnosis, and 135 elderly patients with other gastrointestinal discharge diagnoses were included. Elderly IBD patients were less likely to have ileocolonic Crohn disease (21.4% versus 50.9%; P=0.001), more likely to be prescribed 5-aminosalicylates (61% versus 43%; P=0.04), and less likely to be prescribed biologics (6% versus 21%; P=0.016) or immunomodulators (21% versus 42%; P=0.01). The sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value of a single ICD code for CD were 98%, 96% and 94%, respectively, and for ulcerative colitis (UC) were 98%, 92% and 70%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment approaches in elderly patients were different than in younger IBD patients despite having disease sufficiently severe to require hospitalization. While less accurate in UC, a single ICD-10 IBD code was sufficient to identify elderly CD and UC hospitalized patients.
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