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Methodology and Initial Results From a Real-World Observational Cohort of Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease: TARGET-IBD

Authors :
Edward L. Barnes
Miguel Regueiro
Julie M. Crawford
Laura Dalfonso
Janet S. Hildebrand
John S. Hanson
Derek Gazis
Benjamin Click
Benjamin L Cohen
David T. Rubin
Bruce E. Sands
Marla Dubinsky
Millie D. Long
Source :
Crohn's & Colitis 360. 3
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Background Data on care patterns for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) from large-scale, diverse clinical cohorts in real-world practice are sparse. We developed a real-world cohort of patients receiving care at academic and community sites, for comparative study of therapies and natural history of IBD. Methods We describe novel methodology of central abstraction of clinical data into a real-world IBD registry with patient reported outcomes (PROs). Baseline demographics, clinical characteristics, healthcare utilization, and disease metrics were assessed. Bivariate statistics were used to compare demographic and clinical data by Crohn disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC) and site of care (academic, community). Results In 1 year, 1343 IBD patients (60.1% CD, 38.9% UC) were recruited from 27 academic (49.5%) and community (50.5%) sites, exceeding expectations (110% enrolled). Most participants also consented to provide PROs (59.5%) or biosamples (85.7%). Overall, 48.7% of the cohort provided a baseline PRO, and 62.6% provided a biosample. Compared to UC, CD subjects had higher prior (34.1% CD vs 7.7% UC; P < 0.001) and current (72.1% vs 47.9%; P < 0.001) biologic utilization. CD participants from academic sites had more complicated disease than those from community sites (62.5% vs 46.8% stricturing/penetrating; 33.5% vs 27% perianal; 36.8% vs 14.5% prior biologic, respectively). Nearly all (90.4%) participants had endoscopic data of whom 37.7% were in remission. One-year retention was 98.4%. Conclusions Centralized data abstraction and electronic PRO capture provided efficient recruitment into a large real-world observational cohort. This novel platform provides a resource for clinical outcomes and comparative effectiveness research in IBD.

Details

ISSN :
2631827X
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Crohn's & Colitis 360
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fe4350865a4609b740f082428b5d62ad
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/crocol/otab023