17 results on '"Leong, R"'
Search Results
2. Australia IBD Microbiome (AIM) Study: protocol for a multicentre longitudinal prospective cohort study.
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Williams AJ, Paramsothy R, Wu N, Ghaly S, Leach S, Paramsothy S, Corte C, O'Brien C, Burke C, Wark G, Samocha-Bonet D, Lambert K, Ahlenstiel G, Wasinger V, Dutt S, Pavli P, Grimm M, Lemberg D, Connor S, Leong R, and Hold G
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- Australia epidemiology, Humans, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Prospective Studies, Proteomics, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, Microbiota
- Abstract
Introduction: Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are common chronic idiopathic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), which cause considerable morbidity. Although the precise mechanisms of disease remain unclear, evidence implicates a strong multidirectional interplay between diet, environmental factors, genetic determinants/immune perturbations and the gut microbiota. IBD can be brought into remission using a number of medications, which act by suppressing the immune response. However, none of the available medications address any of the underlying potential mechanisms. As we understand more about how the microbiota drives inflammation, much interest has focused on identifying microbial signals/triggers in the search for effective therapeutic targets. We describe the establishment of the Australian IBD Microbiota (AIM) Study, Australia's first longitudinal IBD bioresource, which will identify and correlate longitudinal microbial and metagenomics signals to disease activity as evaluated by validated clinical instruments, patient-reported surveys, as well as biomarkers. The AIM Study will also gather extensive demographic, clinical, lifestyle and dietary data known to influence microbial composition in order to generate a more complete understanding of the interplay between patients with IBD and their microbiota., Methods: The AIM Study is an Australian multicentre longitudinal prospective cohort study, which will enrol 1000 participants; 500 patients with IBD and 500 healthy controls over a 5-year period. Assessment occurs at 3 monthly intervals over a 24-month period. At each assessment oral and faecal samples are self-collected along with patient-reported outcome measures, with clinical data also collected at baseline, 12 and 24 months. Intestinal tissue will be sampled whenever a colonoscopy is performed. Dietary intake, general health and psychological state will be assessed using validated self-report questionnaires. Samples will undergo metagenomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic and culturomic analyses. Omics data will be integrated with clinical data to identify predictive biomarkers of response to therapy, disease behaviour and environmental factors in patients with IBD., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethical approval for this study has been obtained from the South Eastern Sydney Local Health District Research Ethics Committee (HREC 2019/ETH11443). Findings will be reported at national and international gastroenterology meetings and published in peer-reviewed journals., Trial Registration Number: ACTRN12619000911190., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2021
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3. Barriers to international travel in inflammatory bowel disease patients.
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Aluzaite K, Greveson K, Ben-Horin S, Leong R, Haj O, and Schultz M
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- Australia epidemiology, Female, Humans, Israel epidemiology, Male, New Zealand epidemiology, Travel, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Inflammatory bowel disease poses substantial challenges to travel. We aimed to investigate inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD)-associated challenges to travel, information-seeking behaviour and associated factors., Methods: We collected data on patients' demographics, disease characteristics, travel barriers, information-seeking behaviour and travel outcomes in UK, Australia, New Zealand and Israel (2016-2018). Summary statistics were used to describe the sample, whereas multivariate binary and nominal logistic regression were used to model the outcome variables., Results: Almost 75.4% (1878/2491) participants' data were analysed with 71.14%, 15.4%, 11.2% and 2.1% from UK, Australia, NZ and Israel, respectively (76.3% females, 48.2% 30-49 years old 58.8% Crohn's disease). About 7.7% of study participants sought medical advice/were hospitalised while overseas. About 43.8% cancelled/changed their plans due to IBD. The most common barriers were worry about toilet facilities (76.3%), cleanliness/sanitation (50.9%) and availability of medical care (41.1%). Only 60.5% sought travel advice; the most popular information source was IBD doctor/nurse (32.6%). Almost 32.6% of study participants did not get travel insurance that covered their IBD. Those who did not receive advice or found obtaining travel insurance difficult, were less likely to obtain travel insurance (P < 0.001). Participants who travelled for work were more likely to be hospitalised/seek medical advice overseas and not obtain travel insurance., Conclusions: We report a detailed investigation on the IBD-associated barriers while travelling abroad, common information-seeking behaviours and factors associated with worse outcomes. Importantly, patients from all the surveyed countries provided similar travel barrier and preparation habits, highlighting the consistent nature of the challenge., (© International Society of Travel Medicine 2020. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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4. Symptoms of anxiety and depression are independently associated with inflammatory bowel disease-related disability.
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Chan W, Shim HH, Lim MS, Sawadjaan FLB, Isaac SP, Chuah SW, Leong R, and Kong C
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risk Factors, Severity of Illness Index, Singapore epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Anxiety epidemiology, Depression epidemiology, Disability Evaluation, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases psychology, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) frequently results in disability. The relevance of psychological effects in causing disability, and whether disability occurs similarly in non-Western cohorts is as yet unknown., Aim: We assessed the relationship between symptoms of anxiety and depression, quality of life and disability in a Singaporean IBD cohort and their predictors., Methods: Cross-sectional study. We assessed consecutive IBD subjects' IBD-Disability Index (IBD-DI), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), and IBD questionnaire (IBDQ). Clinical and demographic variables were collected. Non-parametric statistical analyses were performed. Independent predictors of disability were identified through multivariate logistic regression., Results: 200 consecutive subjects were recruited (males: 69%; median age: 43.8 (±15.4) years; 95 had Crohn's disease (CD), 105 had ulcerative colitis (UC); median IBD duration: 10.8 (±9.0) years.) 27% of the cohort had anxiety and/or depression, which worsened disability (IBD-DI: -9 (±14) with anxiety vs 6 (±13) without anxiety, P<0.001; -12 (±16) with depression vs 5 (±13) without depression, P<0.001). Age at diagnosis, use of prednisolone, stricturing CD and active IBD were significant predictors of disability. IBDQ strongly correlated with IBD-DI(r
s =0.82, P<0.01)., Conclusion: Symptoms of anxiety and depression were common in this Asian cohort of IBD and were strongly associated with IBD-related disability. Recognizing psychological issues contributing to disability in IBD is important to ensure holistic care and appropriate treatment., (Copyright © 2017 Editrice Gastroenterologica Italiana S.r.l. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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5. Review article: consensus statements on therapeutic drug monitoring of anti-tumour necrosis factor therapy in inflammatory bowel diseases.
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Mitrev N, Vande Casteele N, Seow CH, Andrews JM, Connor SJ, Moore GT, Barclay M, Begun J, Bryant R, Chan W, Corte C, Ghaly S, Lemberg DA, Kariyawasam V, Lewindon P, Martin J, Mountifield R, Radford-Smith G, Slobodian P, Sparrow M, Toong C, van Langenberg D, Ward MG, and Leong RW
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- Adalimumab blood, Australia, Delphi Technique, Gastrointestinal Agents blood, Humans, Infliximab blood, Treatment Failure, Adalimumab therapeutic use, Drug Monitoring methods, Gastrointestinal Agents therapeutic use, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases drug therapy, Infliximab therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients receiving anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) agents can help optimise outcomes. Consensus statements based on current evidence will help the development of treatment guidelines., Aim: To develop evidence-based consensus statements for TDM-guided anti-TNF therapy in IBD., Methods: A committee of 25 Australian and international experts was assembled. The initial draft statements were produced following a systematic literature search. A modified Delphi technique was used with 3 iterations. Statements were modified according to anonymous voting and feedback at each iteration. Statements with 80% agreement without or with minor reservation were accepted., Results: 22/24 statements met criteria for consensus. For anti-TNF agents, TDM should be performed upon treatment failure, following successful induction, when contemplating a drug holiday and periodically in clinical remission only when results would change management. To achieve clinical remission in luminal IBD, infliximab and adalimumab trough concentrations in the range of 3-8 and 5-12 μg/mL, respectively, were deemed appropriate. The range may differ for different disease phenotypes or treatment endpoints-such as fistulising disease or to achieve mucosal healing. In treatment failure, TDM may identify mechanisms to guide subsequent decision-making. In stable clinical response, TDM-guided dosing may avoid future relapse. Data indicate drug-tolerant anti-drug antibody assays do not offer an advantage over drug-sensitive assays. Further data are required prior to recommending TDM for non-anti-TNF biological agents., Conclusion: Consensus statements support the role of TDM in optimising anti-TNF agents to treat IBD, especially in situations of treatment failure., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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6. Disability in Restorative Proctocolectomy Recipients Measured using the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Disability Index.
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Lee Y, McCombie A, Gearry R, Frizelle FA, Vanamala R, Leong RW, and Eglinton T
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- Adult, Female, Health Care Costs, Humans, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases economics, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases surgery, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires, Disability Evaluation, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases diagnosis, Proctocolectomy, Restorative adverse effects, Proctocolectomy, Restorative economics
- Abstract
Background and Aims: The inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] disability index [IBD-DI], which measures IBD-associated disability, has been validated on IBD patients but not those who have had restorative proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis [RP with IPAA]. This study aimed to utilize the IBD-DI in RP with IPAA recipients and compare ulcerative colitis [UC]-indicated RP with IPAA patients to medically treated UC patients., Methods: This study was population based. Demographic, indication, complication and direct cost data were collected via medical records while disability, quality of life [QoL] and indirect costs were measured using questionnaires and structured interviews. De-identified raw data about medically treated UC patients were provided by a previous study for comparison., Results: In total there were 136 RP with IPAA patients [mean 11.5 years of follow up]. Eighty-four completed the IBD-DI and 80 completed the IBD questionnaire [IBDQ]. The IBDQ and IBD-DI were highly correlated [r = 0.84, p < 0.01]. Worse QoL and disability were found in those who had their position affected at work [both p < 0.01] and those who had more than 100 days off work in the last year [p < 0.01 for QoL and p = 0.012 for disability]. Lower QoL and disability scores were associated with higher indirect and total costs [p < 0.01]. UC patients treated with RP with IPAA had less disability than medically treated UC patients [p = 0.04]., Conclusions: Disability in RP with IPAA recipients can be measured using the IBD-DI. Perioperative complications and high costs of care are associated with higher levels of disability. Disability of RP with IPAA recipients was lower than that of medically managed UC patients., (Copyright © 2016 European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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7. Foreword.
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W Leong R
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- Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized therapeutic use, Australia, Gastroenterology education, Humans, Smartphone, Gastroenterology organization & administration, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases drug therapy, Societies, Medical organization & administration
- Published
- 2016
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8. Research topic: Health economics of biological agents in Australia.
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Wang LC, Collins G, Corte C, Katelaris P, and Leong R
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- Adalimumab economics, Adalimumab pharmacology, Adalimumab therapeutic use, Australia epidemiology, Biological Factors therapeutic use, Drug Costs trends, Health Expenditures trends, Humans, Infliximab economics, Infliximab pharmacology, Infliximab therapeutic use, Time Factors, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha antagonists & inhibitors, Biological Factors economics, Drug Costs statistics & numerical data, Health Expenditures statistics & numerical data, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases drug therapy, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases economics, Prescriptions economics, Prescriptions statistics & numerical data
- Published
- 2016
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9. Incidence and phenotype of inflammatory bowel disease based on results from the Asia-pacific Crohn's and colitis epidemiology study.
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Ng SC, Tang W, Ching JY, Wong M, Chow CM, Hui AJ, Wong TC, Leung VK, Tsang SW, Yu HH, Li MF, Ng KK, Kamm MA, Studd C, Bell S, Leong R, de Silva HJ, Kasturiratne A, Mufeena MNF, Ling KL, Ooi CJ, Tan PS, Ong D, Goh KL, Hilmi I, Pisespongsa P, Manatsathit S, Rerknimitr R, Aniwan S, Wang YF, Ouyang Q, Zeng Z, Zhu Z, Chen MH, Hu PJ, Wu K, Wang X, Simadibrata M, Abdullah M, Wu JC, Sung JJY, and Chan FKL
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- Adult, Asia epidemiology, Australia epidemiology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases diagnosis, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases drug therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Prospective Studies, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are becoming more common in Asia, but epidemiologic data are lacking. The Asia-Pacific Crohn's and Colitis Epidemiology Study aimed to determine the incidence and phenotype of IBD in 8 countries across Asia and in Australia., Methods: We performed a prospective, population-based study of IBD incidence in predefined catchment areas, collecting data for 1 year, starting on April 1, 2011. New cases were ascertained from multiple overlapping sources and entered into a Web-based database. Cases were confirmed using standard criteria. Local endoscopy, pathology, and pharmacy records were searched to ensure completeness of case capture., Results: We identified 419 new cases of IBD (232 of ulcerative colitis [UC], 166 of Crohn's disease [CD], and 21 IBD-undetermined). The crude annual overall incidence values per 100,000 individuals were 1.37 for IBD in Asia (95% confidence interval: 1.25-1.51; 0.76 for UC, 0.54 for CD, and 0.07 for IBD-undetermined) and 23.67 in Australia (95% confidence interval: 18.46-29.85; 7.33 for UC, 14.00 for CD, and 2.33 for IBD-undetermined). China had the highest incidence of IBD in Asia (3.44 per 100,000 individuals). The ratios of UC to CD were 2.0 in Asia and 0.5 in Australia. Median time from symptom onset to diagnosis was 5.5 months (interquartile range, 1.4-15 months). Complicated CD (stricturing, penetrating, or perianal disease) was more common in Asia than Australia (52% vs 24%; P = .001), and a family history of IBD was less common in Asia (3% vs 17%; P < .001)., Conclusions: We performed a large-scale population-based study and found that although the incidence of IBD varies throughout Asia, it is still lower than in the West. IBD can be as severe or more severe in Asia than in the West. The emergence of IBD in Asia will result in the need for specific health care resources, and offers a unique opportunity to study etiologic factors in developing nations., (Copyright © 2013 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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10. Patients' knowledge of pregnancy-related issues in inflammatory bowel disease and validation of a novel assessment tool ('CCPKnow').
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Selinger CP, Eaden J, Selby W, Jones DB, Katelaris P, Chapman G, McDonald C, McLaughlin J, Leong RW, and Lal S
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases complications, Patient Education as Topic, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications etiology, Quality of Life, Reproducibility of Results, Social Class, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases psychology, Pregnancy Complications psychology
- Abstract
Background: Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) require complex therapeutic decisions and life choices concerning pregnancy, but little is known about patient's knowledge of IBD and its treatment before and during pregnancy., Aim: To develop a novel tool (Crohn's and Colitis Pregnancy Knowledge Score 'CCPKnow') to assess knowledge of pregnancy-related issues in IBD. The validated tool was then applied to determine knowledge in patients., Method: Discriminate ability of 'CCPKnow' was validated in four groups with different levels of IBD knowledge. Reliability and readability were tested by Cronbach-α and Flesch-Kencaid. Construct validity was subsequently assessed against general IBD knowledge (CCKnow) in 145 women with IBD. Associations between patient factors and knowledge were studied., Results: Median CCPKnow scores differed significantly between the validation groups (P < 0.001). CCPKnow displayed excellent internal consistency, reliability (Cronbach-α 0.94), readability (reading age 9 years) and close correlation with CCKnow (Spearman's ρ 0.64; P < 0.001). Of 145 patients, 44.8% had poor, 27.6% adequate, 17.3% good and only 10.3% very good knowledge. Better knowledge was associated with Caucasian ethnicity, higher income, having a partner, having children, Crohn's and Colitis Association membership, longer disease duration and Crohn's disease., Conclusions: Crohn's and Colitis Pregnancy Knowledge Score, a novel knowledge assessment tool of pregnancy and IBD, demonstrated excellent test characteristics. We found that nearly half of the women with IBD had poor knowledge, identifying a pressing need for better education., (© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2012
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11. Predictors of corticosteroid-dependent and corticosteroid-refractory inflammatory bowel disease: analysis of a Chinese cohort study.
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Chow DK, Sung JJ, Tsoi KK, Wong VW, Wu JC, Leong RW, and Chan FK
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- Abdominal Pain, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anemia epidemiology, China epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Colitis, Ulcerative complications, Colitis, Ulcerative diagnosis, Diarrhea, Female, Fever epidemiology, Humans, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases complications, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Parenteral Nutrition, Risk Factors, Thrombocytosis epidemiology, Young Adult, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Colitis, Ulcerative drug therapy, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases drug therapy, Phenotype
- Abstract
Background: Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who are corticosteroid-dependent or -refractory are at higher risk of developing disease- and treatment-related complications., Aims: To identify retrospectively clinical factors present at diagnosis that predict the occurrence of corticosteroid dependency and refractoriness in Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) patients., Methods: A total of 310 IBD patients (134 CD, 176 UC) were observed for 2140 person years and their use of systemic corticosteroids was determined. Outcomes of corticosteroid dependency and refractoriness were recorded. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to determine the clinical factors associated with outcomes., Results: Seventy-seven (57.5%) CD and 95 (54.0%) UC patients had received corticosteroids during study period. In CD, thrombocytosis [Hazard ratio (HR):3.0] predicted, whereas colonic CD (HR:0.3) negatively predicted corticosteroid dependency. Stricturing phenotype (HR:4.5) predicted corticosteroid-refractory CD. For UC, thrombocytosis (HR:3.9) and extensive colitis (HR:1.7) predicted corticosteroid dependency. Presence of anaemia (HR:10.8) at diagnosis and initial requirement of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) (HR:18.8) predicted corticosteroid-refractory UC. The cumulative risks of surgery were 17.8% and 5.4% for CD and UC patients respectively at 1 year after starting corticosteroids., Conclusions: Thrombocytosis at diagnosis predicted corticosteroid-dependency in IBD. Stricturing phenotype of CD and the presence of anaemia in UC predicted subsequent course of corticosteroid refractoriness.
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- 2009
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12. A comparative study of goblet cell and pancreatic exocine autoantibodies combined with ASCA and pANCA in Chinese and Caucasian patients with IBD.
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Lawrance IC, Hall A, Leong R, Pearce C, and Murray K
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antibodies, Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic blood, Antibodies, Fungal blood, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Saccharomyces cerevisiae immunology, Sensitivity and Specificity, Asian People, Autoantibodies blood, Goblet Cells immunology, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases blood, Pancreas immunology, White People
- Abstract
Background: The incidence of Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) is increasing, but differentiating between them is often extremely difficult. Pancreatic (PAB) and goblet cell autoantibodies (GAB) are specific for CD and UC, respectively, but with low sensitivity. In combination with anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ASCA) and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (pANCA) testing, these antibodies may improve differentiation between the diseases. This study determined the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV) of PAB and GAB +/- ASCA and pANCA testing in Chinese and Caucasian IBD populations., Results: Patients were recruited from Caucasian and Chinese populations (CD, n = 100; UC, n = 99; controls, n = 100). PAB was highly specific for CD, and detection was greater in patients less than 35 years old and in Chinese compared with Caucasian patients with CD (CD, 46% versus 22%, P = 0.018; UC, 2% versus 6%; controls, 0% versus 2%). GAB detection was poor in all groups (<2%). PAB showed a PPV of 93% to differentiate all patients with CD from patients with UC, but only 62% for those with isolated colonic disease. The PPV of PAB increased to 100%, specificity was 100%, and sensitivity was 21% for isolated colonic disease when combined with pANCA and ASCA. PAB expression was not associated with stricturing or perforating CD., Conclusions: This study identified that GAB was not useful in our patients with IBD. PAB expression was highly specific for CD and more sensitive in Chinese than Caucasian patients with CD. The combination of PAB, pANCA, and ASCA testing improved the differentiation between UC and CD, particularly in isolated colonic disease, compared with pANCA and ASCA testing alone.
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- 2005
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13. Systematic review and meta-analysis: assessment of factors affecting disability in inflammatory bowel disease and the reliability of the inflammatory bowel disease disability index.
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Lo, B., Prosberg, M. V., Gluud, L. L., Chan, W., Leong, R. W., van der List, E., van der Have, M., Sarter, H., Gower‐Rousseau, C., Peyrin‐Biroulet, L., Vind, I., and Burisch, J.
- Subjects
INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,CROHN'S disease ,ULCERATIVE colitis ,DISABILITIES ,STEROID drugs ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Background The Inflammatory Bowel Disease Disability Index ( IBD- DI) has recently been developed for patients with Crohn's disease ( CD) and ulcerative colitis ( UC). Aim To assess the severity of disability and associated factors using the IBD- DI, and review the validity of the IBD- DI as a tool. Method Systematic review of cross-sectional studies. Patients included had UC or CD and were classified as active, in remission, or needing surgery, biological and/or steroid treatment. We included studies assessing disability using the IBD- DI and that were captured by electronic and manual searches (January 2017). The possibility of bias was evaluated with the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Results Nine studies were included with 3167 patients. Comparatively, patients with active disease had higher disability rates than those in remission ( SMD [ CI95] = 1.49[1.11, 1.88], I
2 = 94% , P<.01), while patients on biological treatment had lower disability rates than those receiving corticosteroid treatment ( SMD [ CI95] = −0.22[−0.36, −0.08], I2 = 0%, P<.01). Disease activity and unemployment were found to be associated factors. The IBD- DI scored 'good' for internal consistency, 'fair' to 'excellent' for intra-rater reliability and 'excellent' for inter-rater reliability. Construct validity was 'moderately strong' to 'very strong' and structural validity was found to be mainly unidimensional. The IBD- DI had excellent responsiveness, while its interpretability was only useful on a group level. Conclusions This systematic review and meta-analysis found a significant association between disease activity, treatment received and disability; although significant heterogeneity was found. The IBD- DI is reliable and valid, but further studies are needed to measure its interpretability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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14. Systematic review with meta-analysis: breastfeeding and the risk of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.
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Xu, L., Lochhead, P., Ko, Y., Claggett, B., Leong, R. W., and Ananthakrishnan, A. N.
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BREASTFEEDING ,CROHN'S disease ,ULCERATIVE colitis ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,META-analysis ,HETEROGENEITY - Abstract
Background Breastfeeding is a modifiable factor that may influence development of inflammatory bowel diseases. However, literature on this has been inconsistent and not accounted for heterogeneity in populations and exposure. Aim To conduct a meta-analysis to examine the association between breastfeeding in infancy and risk of Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Methods A systematic search of Medline/PubMed and Embase was performed for full text, English-language literature through November 2016. Studies were included if they described breastfeeding in infancy in patients with CD or UC, and healthy controls. Data were pooled using a random effects model for analysis. Results A total of 35 studies were included in the final analysis, comprising 7536 individuals with CD, 7353 with UC and 330 222 controls. Ever being breastfed was associated with a lower risk of CD ( OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.59-0.85) and UC ( OR 0.78, 95% CI 0.67-0.91). While this inverse association was observed in all ethnicity groups, the magnitude of protection was significantly greater among Asians ( OR 0.31, 95% CI 0.20-0.48) compared to Caucasians ( OR 0.78, 95% CI 0.66-0.93; P = .0001) in CD. Breastfeeding duration showed a dose-dependent association, with strongest decrease in risk when breastfed for at least 12 months for CD ( OR 0.20, 95% CI 0.08-0.50) and UC ( OR 0.21, 95% CI 0.10-0.43) as compared to 3 or 6 months. Conclusion Breastfeeding in infancy protects against the development of CD and ulcerative colitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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15. Efficacy of thiopurines and adalimumab in preventing Crohn's disease recurrence in high-risk patients - a POCER study analysis.
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De Cruz, P., Kamm, M. A., Hamilton, A. L., Ritchie, K. J., Krejany, E. O., Gorelik, A., Liew, D., Prideaux, L., Lawrance, I. C., Andrews, J. M., Bampton, P. A., Jakobovits, S., Florin, T. H., Gibson, P. R., Debinski, H., Gearry, R. B., Macrae, F. A., Leong, R. W., Kronborg, I., and Radford‐Smith, G.
- Subjects
ADALIMUMAB ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,SICK leave ,CROHN'S disease - Abstract
Background Crohn's disease recurs in the majority of patients after intestinal resection. Aim To compare the relative efficacy of thiopurines and anti-TNF therapy in patients at high risk of disease recurrence. Methods As part of a larger study comparing post-operative management strategies, patients at high risk of recurrence (smoker, perforating disease, ≥2nd operation) were treated after resection of all macroscopic disease with 3 months metronidazole together with either azathioprine 2 mg/kg/day or mercaptopurine 1.5 mg/kg/day. Thiopurine-intolerant patients received adalimumab induction then 40 mg fortnightly. Patients underwent colonoscopy at 6 months with endoscopic recurrence assessed blind to treatment. Results A total of 101 patients [50% male; median (IQR) age 36 (25-46) years] were included. There were no differences in disease history between thiopurine- and adalimumab-treated patients. Fifteen patients withdrew prior to 6 months, five due to symptom recurrence (of whom four were colonoscoped). Endoscopic recurrence (Rutgeerts score i2-i4) occurred in 33 of 73 (45%) thiopurine vs. 6 of 28 (21%) adalimumab-treated patients [intention-to-treat (ITT); P = 0.028] or 24 of 62 (39%) vs. 3 of 24 (13%) respectively [per-protocol analysis (PPA); P = 0.020]. Complete mucosal endoscopic normality (Rutgeerts i0) occurred in 17/73 (23%) vs. 15/28 (54%) (ITT; P = 0.003) and in 27% vs. 63% (PPA; P = 0.002). The most advanced disease (Rutgeerts i3 and i4) occurred in 8% vs. 4% (thiopurine vs. adalimumab). Conclusions In Crohn's disease patients at high risk of post-operative recurrence adalimumab is superior to thiopurines in preventing early disease recurrence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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16. Smoking prevalence and its influence on disease course and surgery in Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.
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Lunney, P. C., Kariyawasam, V. C., Wang, R. R., Middleton, K. L., Huang, T., Selinger, C. P., Andrews, J. M., Katelaris, P. H., and Leong, R. W. L.
- Subjects
SMOKING ,CROHN'S disease ,ULCERATIVE colitis ,CIGARETTE smokers ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases - Abstract
Background Smoking demonstrates divergent effects in Crohn's disease ( CD) and ulcerative colitis ( UC). Smoking frequency is greater in CD and deleterious to its disease course. Conversely, UC is primarily a disease of nonsmokers and ex-smokers, with reports of disease amelioration in active smoking. Aim To determine the prevalence of smoking and its effects on disease progression and surgery in a well-characterised cohort of inflammatory bowel diseases ( IBD) patients. Methods Patients with smoking data of the Sydney IBD Cohort were included. Demographic, phenotypic, medical, surgical and hospitalisation data were analysed and reported on the basis of patient smoking status. Results 1203 IBD patients were identified comprising 626 CD and 557 UC with 6725 and 6672 patient-years of follow-up, respectively. CD patients were more likely to smoke than UC patients (19.2% vs. 10.2%, P < 0.001). A history of smoking in CD was associated with an increased proportional surgery rate (45.8% vs. 37.8%, P = 0.045), requirement for IBD-related hospitalisation ( P = 0.009) and incidence of peripheral arthritis (29.8% vs. 22.0%, P = 0.027). Current smokers with UC demonstrated reduced corticosteroid utilisation (24.1% vs. 37.5%, P = 0.045), yet no reduction in the rates of colectomy (3.4% vs. 6.6%, P = 0.34) or hospital admission ( P = 0.25) relative to nonsmokers. Ex-smokers with UC required proportionately greater immunosuppressive (36.2% vs. 26.3%, P = 0.041) and corticosteroid (43.7% vs. 34.5%, P = 0.078) therapies compared with current and never smokers. Conclusions This study confirms the detrimental effects of smoking in CD, yet failed to demonstrate substantial benefit from smoking in UC. These data should encourage all patients with IBD to quit smoking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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17. Quality of life in Chinese patients with inflammatory bowel disease: validation of the Chinese translation of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire.
- Author
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Leong, R. W. L., Lee, Y. T., Ching, J. Y. L., and Sung, J. J. Y.
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QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases , *CHINESE people , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Summary Background : Health-related quality of life is an important outcome measure in inflammatory bowel disease. The Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire is a quality of life questionnaire that has not been validated previously in Chinese patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Aim : To develop and validate a Chinese translation of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire, specifically determining its construct validity, discriminant ability, reliability and sensitivity to change. Methods : We developed a Chinese version of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire. Chinese patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis completed the Chinese Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire and visual analogue scales measuring systemic, social, bowel and emotional well-being. Patients also completed a validated Chinese SF-36 generic quality of life questionnaire, the Crohn's disease activity index or the clinical activity index for ulcerative colitis. Results : One hundred and thirty-five patients (59 with Crohn's disease and 76 with ulcerative colitis) were enrolled, 99 of whom also completed the Chinese Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire for a second time. The Chinese Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire correlated well with the SF-36 for all four domains (Spearman: r = 0.55–0.80), the Crohn's disease activity index ( r = -0.62–0.72) and the clinical activity index for ulcerative colitis ( r = -0.44–0.68), as well as with the visual analogue scales. The Chinese Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire accurately distinguished between active and inactive disease. Test–re-test reliability showed excellent intra-class correlation (0.76–0.92; all P < 0.001). The Chinese Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire was also sensitive to changes in disease activity ( P < 0.05). Conclusion : The Chinese Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire is a valid and reliable test that correlates well with the patients'... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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