| Literature DB >> 28143594 |
J F Ludvigsson1,2, K Büsch3, O Olén3,4, J Askling3,5, K E Smedby3, A Ekbom3, E Lindberg6, M Neovius3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We evaluated the impact of different case definition algorithms on the prevalence of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) and to compare the occurrence of certain diseases compared to matched controls.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; Inflammatory bowel disease; Paediatrics; Prevalence; Sweden; Ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28143594 PMCID: PMC5282815 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-017-0578-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Characteristics, medical and surgical treatment of children with register-identified inflammatory bowel disease (prevalent cases Dec 31st, 2010)
| Inflammatory Bowel Disease | Crohn’s Disease | Ulcerative Colitis | IBD-U | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boys, n (%) | 802 (56%) | 319 (58%) | 317 (54%) | 166 (56%) |
| Age (y); mean (SD) | ||||
|
| 10 (4) | 11 (4) | 10 (4) | 9 (4) |
|
| 14 (3) | 14 (3) | 14 (3) | 14 (3) |
| Age groups in 2010 | ||||
|
| 156 (11%) | 51 (9%) | 71 (12%) | 34 (11%) |
|
| 1276 (89%) | 497 (91%) | 514 (88%) | 265 (89%) |
| Presence of diseases considered to be extra-intestinal manifestations | 281 (20%) | 115 (21%) | 91 (16%) | 75 (25%) |
| IBD-related in- and outpatient visits in 2010 | ||||
|
| 1199 (84%) | 451 (82%) | 492 (84%) | 256 (86%) |
|
| 310 (22%) | 128 (23%) | 121 (21%) | 61 (20%) |
| Major IBD-related surgery | ||||
| In 2010 | 35 (2%) | 23 (4%) | 7 (1%) | 5 (2%) |
| During 1993-2010c | 78 (5%) | 28 (5%) | 23 (4%) | 27 (9%) |
| Colectomy | 36 (3%) | 1 (0.2%) | 18 (3%) | 17 (6%) |
| Intestinal surgery | 45 (3%) | 27 (5%) | 5 (1%) | 13 (4%) |
| Rectal surgery | 6 (0.4%) | 1 (0.2%) | 2 (0.3%) | 3 (1%) |
| Minor bowel surgery | 83 (6%) | 58 (11%) | 6 (1%) | 19 (6%) |
| IBD-related drug treatment | ||||
| In 2010 | 1213 (85%) | 443 (80%) | 502 (86%) | 262 (88%) |
|
| 1 065 (74%) | 370 (68%) | 472 (81%) | 223 (75%) |
|
| 593 (41%) | 203 (37%) | 257 (44%) | 133 (44%) |
|
| 666 (47%) | 307 (56%) | 209 (36%) | 150 (50%) |
| During 2005-2010b | 1333 (93%) | 500 (91%) | 541 (92%) | 292 (98%) |
IBD = inflammatory bowel disease; Patients required to have at least two listings of the selected diagnoses to be defined as a case; Differential diagnosis defined as Behcet’s disease, irritable bowel syndrome, intestinal tuberculosis, amoebic colitis, celiac disease, diverticulitis, ischemic colitis, non-infective colitis, radiation damage, and infectious/bacterial colitis. Diseases with main focus on those considered to be extra-intestinal manifestations were defined as rheumatic, dermatologic, hepatobiliary and pancreatic diseases and were based on the World Gastroenterology Organization Practice Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of IBD and/or the treatment guidelines for IBD from the Swedish Association of Gastroenterology [22, 29]. Major IBD-related surgery defined as total colectomy, partial excision of intestine, and partial excision of rectum; IBD-related drug treatment defined as dispensed prescription of aminosalicylates, corticosteroids, immune modifiers, and biologics; Codes used for physician-diagnosed and comorbid conditions considered to be extra-intestinal manifestations are available in the SDC, Additional file 5: Table S5; Codes used in this analysis are available above in Additional file 3: Table S3 (surgical procedures) and Additional file 4: Table S4 (dispensed prescription drugs); Numbers do not sum up as overlap between the groups e.g., colectomy and intestinal surgery or steroids and immunosuppressants were possible
aInfusion biologics are covered to a lesser extent in the Prescribed Drug Register (e.g., about 20% of infliximab use in 2009) [21]; Given that infusion biologics are covered to a lesser extent, this number should be interpreted with caution
bData from the Prescribed Drug Register only available since 2005 onwards
cNote that surgery after the 18th birthday is not counted and that only a minority of patients in the sample have been followed for >4 years at their 18th birthday
dEarly onset defined as with a diagnosis before 10 years of age [14]
Fig. 1a Register-based prevalence of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease (<18 years of age, n = 1432) for actively monitored and treated disease in 2010 and overall in 2010. IBD = inflammatory bowel disease; UC = ulcerative colitis; CD = Crohn’s disease; Patients required to have at least 2 listings of the selected diagnoses to be defined as a case; Treated in a given year was defined as having at least one of the two inflammatory bowel disease-related visits occurring in 2010 and at least one inflammatory bowel disease-related dispensed prescription in 2010. b Additional sensitivity analysis to evaluate the impact on the overall inflammatory bowel disease prevalence estimate. Estimate based on a source population in 2010 of 1,919,094 < 18 years old, 1,794,267 < 17 years old, 1,675,031 < 16 years old and 1,564,959 < 15 years old (www.scb.se); IBD = inflammatory bowel disease
Fig. 2Presence of diseases considered to be extra-intestinal manifestations in prevalent children with inflammatory bowel disease (n = 1432), ulcerative colitis (n = 585), Crohn’s disease (n = 548), IBD unclassified (n = 299) and in matched general population controls (n = 8583; matched by age, sex, and county of residence at time of identification). * p < 0.01 for comparison between children with IBD, UC; CD or IBD-U and matched controls; Patients required to have at least 2 listings of the selected diagnoses to be defined as a case; Rheumatic diseases defined as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic and enteropathic arthropathies, juvenile arthritis, unspecified arthritis, pain in joints, Sjögrens syndrome, Behcet’s disease, ankylosing spondylitis; Dermatologic diseases defined as pyoderma gangraenosum, erythema nodosum, psoriasis, febrile neutrophilic dermatosis, aphthous stomatitis; Hepatobiliary diseases defined as primary sclerosing cholangitis, pericholangitis, cholelithiasis, chronic active hepatitis, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; Pancreatic diseases defined as acute or chronic pancreatitis; Codes used in this analysis are available in the SDC, Additional file 5: Table S5; patients IBD-U defined as patients with both a UC and a CD diagnosis during follow up