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Treatment Patterns and Standardized Outcome Assessments Among Patients With Inflammatory Conditions of the Pouch in a Prospective Multicenter Registry

Authors :
Edward L Barnes
Parakkal Deepak
Poonam Beniwal-Patel
Laura Raffals
Maia Kayal
Marla Dubinsky
Shannon Chang
Peter D R Higgins
Jennifer I Barr
Joseph Galanko
Yue Jiang
Raymond K Cross
Millie D Long
Hans H Herfarth
Source :
Crohn'scolitis 360. 4(3)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Much of our understanding about the natural history of pouch-related disorders has been generated from selected populations. We designed a geographically diverse, prospective registry to study the disease course among patients with 1 of 4 inflammatory conditions of the pouch. The primary objectives in this study were to demonstrate the feasibility of a prospective pouch registry and to evaluate the predominant treatment patterns for pouch-related disorders. Methods We used standardized diagnostic criteria to prospectively enroll patients with acute pouchitis, chronic antibiotic-dependent pouchitis (CADP), chronic antibiotic refractory pouchitis (CARP), or Crohn’s disease (CD) of the pouch. We obtained detailed clinical and demographic data at the time of enrollment, along with patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures. Results We enrolled 318 patients (10% acute pouchitis, 27% CADP, 12% CARP, and 51% CD of the pouch). Among all patients, 55% were on a biologic or small molecule therapy. Patients with CD of the pouch were more likely to use several classes of therapy (P < .001). Among patients with active disease at the time of enrollment, 23% with CARP and 40% with CD of the pouch were in clinical remission at 6 months after enrollment. Conclusions In a population where most patients had refractory inflammatory conditions of the pouch, we established a framework to evaluate PROs and clinical effectiveness. This infrastructure will be valuable for long-term studies of real-world effectiveness for pouch-related disorders.

Subjects

Subjects :
Gastroenterology

Details

ISSN :
2631827X
Volume :
4
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Crohn'scolitis 360
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....04392ef27a9eb2013402117010b511ec