Literature DB >> 31396759

Diverticular disease epidemiology: acute hospitalisations are growing fastest in young men.

J B Broad1, Z Wu2, S Xie2, I P Bissett3, M J Connolly2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Older age has long been linked to risk of diverticulitis, but the epidemiology is seldom described for a national population. The aim of this study was to investigate age- and gender differences in incidence, temporal trends, lifetime risk and prevalence related to acute diverticulitis hospitalisations in New Zealand.
METHODS: Records of all hospitalisations with diverticulitis the primary diagnosis were obtained from the Ministry of Health for the period 2000-2015. The first acute diverticulitis admission recorded for an individual was taken as an incident event; all others were classified as recurrent. Trends in age- and sex-specific and age-standardised incidence rates are described, and lifetime risk and prevalence estimated.
RESULTS: Over the 16 years from 2000 to 2015, 37,234 acute hospitalisations for diverticulitis were recorded in 28,329 people aged 30 + years (median = 66 years). Rates of incident hospitalisations rose with age, from 5/10,000 person-years at age 50-54 years to 19/10,000py by age 80-84 years. Rates for women were lower than men before age 55 years, but higher thereafter. Age-standardised rates rose 0.2/10,000py annually, but approximately doubled among men aged < 50 years. Lifetime risk was estimated at over 5%, with the prevalence pool rising to over 1.5% of the population aged 30+ in 2030.
CONCLUSIONS: Rapid increases in diverticulitis admissions among young men since 2000 correspond with increases reported elsewhere but remain unexplained; notably young women follow similar trends 5-10 years later. Increasing incidence, combined with population ageing, adds urgency to explain diverticular formation, to understand factors that trigger or provoke their inflammation/infection, and to clarify treatment and (self-)management pathways.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Age factors; Colon; Diverticulitis; Diverticulum; Epidemiology; Sex factors

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31396759     DOI: 10.1007/s10151-019-02040-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tech Coloproctol        ISSN: 1123-6337            Impact factor:   3.781


  55 in total

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5.  Diverticular disease of the large intestine in Northern Norway.

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8.  Diverticular disease increases and effects younger ages: an epidemiological study of 10-year trends.

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9.  Diverticular disease of the colon--on the rise: a study of hospital admissions in England between 1989/1990 and 1999/2000.

Authors:  J Y Kang; J Hoare; A Tinto; S Subramanian; C Ellis; A Majeed; D Melville; J D Maxwell
Journal:  Aliment Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2003-05-01       Impact factor: 8.171

10.  Case series: diverticulitis in the young.

Authors:  Christopher D Cole; Allan B Wolfson
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  4 in total

Review 1.  Acute Diverticulitis in Young Patients: A Review of the Changing Epidemiology and Etiology.

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Authors:  A Amato; F Mataloni; M Bruzzone; M Carabotti; R Cirocchi; R Nascimbeni; G Gambassi; N P Vettoretto; L Pinnarelli; R Cuomo; B Annibale; V Fontana; G A Binda
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4.  Cost-effectiveness of sigmoid resection with primary anastomosis or end colostomy for perforated diverticulitis: an analysis of the randomized Ladies trial.

Authors:  D P V Lambrichts; S van Dieren; W A Bemelman; J F Lange
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