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The Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire in Randomized Controlled Trials of Treatment for Ulcerative Colitis: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Authors :
Andrew Lovley
Joseph C. Cappelleri
Martha S. Bayliss
Andrew G. Bushmakin
Marco DiBonaventura
Stephen Maher
Aaron Yarlas
Source :
J Patient Cent Res Rev, Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews, Vol 7, Iss 2, Pp 189-205 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Aurora Health Care, Inc., 2020.

Abstract

Purpose: The 32-item Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire (IBDQ-32) is the most frequently used instrument to capture disease-specific quality of life in randomized clinical trials for ulcerative colitis. This review and meta-analysis provides the first synthesis of evidence regarding the sensitivity of IBDQ-32 total and domain scores to treatment efficacy. Methods: A systematic literature search and risk-of-bias assessment yielded 14 articles that were included in the primary analysis. Treatments were categorized as efficacious if they met the primary efficacy endpoint (which was not the IBDQ-32); otherwise they were categorized as non-efficacious. A continuous measure of treatment efficacy was calculated for each primary efficacy endpoint. Meta-analysis using random-effects models compared standardized mean differences in IBDQ-32 total and domain change scores between target dose and control arms. Meta-regression compared the association between treatment efficacy and these outcomes. Results: Studies with efficacious treatments showed larger mean improvements relative to controls in IBDQ-32 total scores and all 4 domains (Hedges’ g range: 0.49 to 0.67; P < 0.001 for all). At the same time, patients in studies with non-efficacious treatments showed small and nonsignificant improvements in these outcomes relative to controls (Hedges’ g range: 0.05 to 0.23; P > 0.09 for all). Meta-regression models showed that the magnitude of treatment efficacy was a positive predictor of these same IBDQ-32 outcomes. Conclusions: These analyses found that IBDQ-32 scores are sensitive to treatment. The results provided here support the use of the IBDQ-32 to capture treatment benefits on quality of life for patients with ulcerative colitis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Patient Cent Res Rev, Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews, Vol 7, Iss 2, Pp 189-205 (2020)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5b2009303b1fc7a93dc630ddfd7bcf38