| Literature DB >> 33855269 |
Thomas M Goodsall1,2, Richard Noy3, Tran M Nguyen4, Samuel P Costello5,6, Vipul Jairath4,7,8, Robert V Bryant5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a lifelong disease requiring frequent assessment to guide treatment and prevent flares or progression. Multiple tools are available for clinicians to monitor disease activity; however, there are a paucity of data to inform which monitoring tools are most acceptable to patients. The review aims to describe the available evidence for patient preference, satisfaction, tolerance and/or acceptability of the available monitoring tools in adults with IBD.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptability; Inflammatory bowel disease; Monitoring tools; Patient preference; Tolerability
Year: 2020 PMID: 33855269 PMCID: PMC8023822 DOI: 10.1093/jcag/gwaa001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Can Assoc Gastroenterol ISSN: 2515-2084
Figure 1.Prisma diagram.
Characteristics and results of included studies
| Study (year) | Study type | Participant number (disease phenotype) | Participant characteristics | Age—years (mean ± SD) | Monitoring tools compared | Outcome measures | Assessment tool |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buisson et al. (2017) ( | Cohort | 916 (618 CD, 298 UC) | French adults with established IBD. Male 40.4% | CD 38.2 (20) UC 42.1 (14.5) | Venipuncture Stool collection Colonoscopy Rectosigmoidoscopy MRE† Ultrasound† WCE† | Acceptability | 100 mm VAS |
| Camara Viudez et al. (2014) ( | Cohort—abstract only | 48 CD | Spanish adults with CD. Male 50% | 43 (13.8) | Colonoscopy MRI colonography | Preference | Binary ranking |
| Chang et al. (2011) ( | Cohort—abstract only | 27 Majority CD | Australian adults with IBD requiring colonoscopy Male 63% | 39 | Colonoscopy FC | Satisfaction Preference | Likert scale and binary preference ranking. |
| Florie et al. (2005) ( | Cohort | 31 CD | Dutch adults with suspected CD relapse. Male 71% | 36 (12) | Colonoscopy MRE | Preference | Likert scale and binary preference ranking. |
| Friedman et al. (2018) ( | Cohort—abstract and unpublished data only | 260 (GIUS = 73, non-GIUS = 187) | Australian adults with IBD. Male 53.8% | GIUS 38.8 (13.8) Non-GIUS 40 (12.4) | GIUS Colonoscopy CT MRI | Satisfaction Preference | 100 mm VAS and preference ranking |
| Hafeez et al. (2012) ( | Cohort | 18 (10 IBD [2 CD, 8 UC], 8 non-IBD and excluded from analysis) | English adults enrolled in a trial comparing MRI colonoscopy with colonoscopy. Male 61% | 41 (range 17–65) | Colonoscopy MRI colonoscopy | Preference | Binary ranking |
| Lahat et al. (2016) ( | Cohort | 56 CD | Israeli adults with small bowel CD, mild disease or in remission Male 59% | 32 (11) | WCE MRE | Preference | Binary ranking |
| Miles et al. (2019) ( | Cohort | 159 CD | UK patients aged 16 years and over with a new diagnosis of CD or established CD with suspected flare. Male 40.9% | 38.2 (16.4) | Colonoscopy Rectosigmoidoscopy MRE GIUS Hydro-GIUS CT-Enterography BaFT | Acceptability Burden Preference | Likert scale and binary preference ranking for MRE and GIUS |
| Noiseux et al. (2019) ( | Cohort | 210 (145 CD, 65 UC) | Canadian adults with IBD and members of Crohn’s and Colitis Canada. Male 18.6% | Unclear | General blood test Stool test Colonoscopy Colon biopsy Medical imaging | Level of comfort | Likert scale |
| Rajagopalan et al. (2018) ( | Cohort—abstract and unpublished data only | 121 (79 CD, 42 UC) | Australian adults with IBD undergoing GIUS during routine clinical care. Male 45% | 42 (17) | Blood sampling Stool sampling Colonoscopy Sigmoidoscopy GIUS Imaging† | Acceptability | 10-point VAS |
BaFT, barium follow through; CD, Crohn’s disease; FC, faecal calprotectin; GIUS, gastrointestinal ultrasound; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; MRE, magnetic resonance enterography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; WCE, wireless capsule endoscopy; SD, standard deviation; UC, ulcerative colitis.
†=CD cohort only.
Newcastle-Ottawa Scale assessment of study quality
| Study (year) | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | Total score (/9) | AHRQ Standard | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Representative-ness of the exposed cohort (/1) | Selection of the non-exposed cohort (/1) | Ascertainment of exposure (/1) | Demonstration that outcome of interest was not present at the start of study (/1) | Comparability of cohorts on the basis of the design or analysis (/2) | Assessment of outcome (/1) | Was follow-up long enough for outcomes to occur (/1) | Adequacy of follow-up (/1) | |||
| Buisson et al. (2017) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 | Fair |
| Camara Viudez et al. (2014) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 4 | Poor |
| Chang et al. (2011) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 | Fair |
| Florie et al. (2005) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 | Fair |
| Friedman et al. (2018) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | Poor |
| Hafeez et al. (2012) ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 7 | Good |
| Lahat et al. (2016) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 | Fair |
| Miles et al. (2019) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 5 | Poor |
| Noiseux et al. (2019) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 5 | Poor |
| Rajagopalan et al. (2018) ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 | Fair |
Patient satisfaction, acceptability and preference for monitoring tools in IBD
| Study | Monitoring tools compared | Measurement tool | Domain reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient satisfaction | Acceptability of monitoring tool | Patient preference | |||
| Buisson et al. (2017) | Colonoscopy GIUS MRE Rectosigmoidoscopy Stool collection Venipuncture WCE | 100 mm VAS | - | CD: GIUS (9.3) and venepuncture (9.3) most acceptable, WCE (8.5), M RE (8.0), and stool collection (7.7) all similar, colonoscopy (6.7) and rectosigmoidoscopy (4.4) least acceptable ( | - |
| Camara Viudez et al. (2014) | Colonoscopy MRI colonography | Binary ranking | - | - | Trend for preference of Colonoscopy (48%) over MRI (33%) ( |
| Chang et al. (2011) | Colonoscopy FC | Likert scale and binary ranking | Trend towards greater satisfaction with FC compared with colonoscopy ( | - | FC preferred over colonoscopy by 92% ( |
| Florie et al. (2005) | Ileocolonoscopy MRE | Likert scale and binary ranking | - | MRE preferred over ileocolonoscopy by 94% ( | |
| Friedman et al. (2018) | Colonoscopy CT GIUS MRI | 100 mm VAS and preference ranking | GIUS rated highest level of satisfaction. Rating for GIUS in experienced patients (90.9) higher than in treatment naïve (83.7) ( | - | GIUS preferred over other modalities by 65% and 62% of GIUS experienced and naïve patients‡ |
| Hafeez et al. (2012) | Colonoscopy MRI Colonography | Binary ranking | - | - | Trend for preference of MRI colonography (50%) over colonoscopy (30%) ( |
| Lahat et al. (2016) | MRE WCE | Binary ranking | - | - | WCE preferred over MRE by 78% ( |
| Miles et al. (2019) | BaFT Colonoscopy CTE Hydro-GIUS GIUS MRE Rectosigmoidoscopy | Likert scale and binary ranking for GIUS and MRE | - | GIUS acceptable in 99% compared with MRE 88% ( | GIUS preferred over MRE by 80% ( |
| Noiseux et al. (2019) | General blood test Stool test Colonoscopy Colon biopsy Medical imaging | Likert Scale | Percentage reporting high level of comfort for stool test 61.4%, Medical imaging 60.8%, colon biopsy 54.1%, colonoscopy 24.5%, general blood test 9.8%. No statistical comparison available. | ||
| Rajagopalan et al. (2018) | Blood sampling Stool sampling Colonoscopy Sigmoidoscopy GIUS Imaging | 100mm VAS | Overall acceptability of GIUS (9.21) was significantly greater than acceptability of blood sampling (8.87), imaging (8.67 CD only), stool sampling (8.17), sigmoidoscopy (8.0 UC only) or colonoscopy (7.94) ( | ||
BaFT, barium follow through; CD, Crohn’s disease; FC, faecal calprotectin; GIUS, gastrointestinal ultrasound; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; MRE, magnetic resonance enterography; MRI magnetic resonance imaging; UC, Ulcerative colitis; WCE, wireless capsule endoscopy.
†=For each comparison. ‡=No statistical comparison available.