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Global Hospitalization Trends for Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis in the 21st Century: A Systematic Review With Temporal Analyses

Authors :
Michael J. Buie
Joshua Quan
Joseph W. Windsor
Stephanie Coward
Tawnya M. Hansen
James A. King
Paulo G. Kotze
Richard B. Gearry
Siew C. Ng
Joyce W.Y. Mak
Maria T. Abreu
David T. Rubin
Charles N. Bernstein
Rupa Banerjee
Jesus K. Yamamoto-Furusho
Remo Panaccione
Cynthia H. Seow
Christopher Ma
Fox E. Underwood
Vineet Ahuja
Nicola Panaccione
Abdel-Aziz Shaheen
Jayna Holroyd-Leduc
Gilaad G. Kaplan
Domingo Balderramo
Vui Heng Chong
Fabián Juliao-Baños
Usha Dutta
Marcellus Simadibrata
Jamilya Kaibullayeva
Yang Sun
Ida Hilmi
Raja Affendi Raja Ali
Mukesh Sharma Paudel
Mansour Altuwaijri
Juanda Leo Hartono
Shu Chen Wei
Julajak Limsrivilai
Sara El Ouali
Beatriz Iade Vergara
Viet Hang Dao
Paul Kelly
Phoebe Hodges
Yinglei Miao
Maojuan Li
Source :
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

The evolving epidemiologic patterns of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) throughout the world, in conjunction with advances in therapeutic treatments, may influence hospitalization rates of IBD. We performed a systematic review with temporal analysis of hospitalization rates for IBD across the world in the 21st century.We systematically reviewed Medline and Embase for population-based studies reporting hospitalization rates for IBD, Crohn's disease (CD), or ulcerative colitis (UC) in the 21st century. Log-linear models were used to calculate the average annual percentage change (AAPC) with associated 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs). Random-effects meta-analysis pooled country-level AAPCs. Data were stratified by the epidemiologic stage of a region: compounding prevalence (stage 3) in North America, Western Europe, and Oceania vs acceleration of incidence (stage 2) in Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America vs emergence (stage 1) in developing countries.Hospitalization rates for a primary diagnosis of IBD were stable in countries in stage 3 (AAPC, -0.13%; 95% CI, -0.72 to 0.97), CD (AAPC, 0.20%; 95% CI, -1.78 to 2.17), and UC (AAPC, 0.02%; 95% CI, -0.91 to 0.94). In contrast, hospitalization rates for a primary diagnosis were increasing in countries in stage 2 for IBD (AAPC, 4.44%; 95% CI, 2.75 to 6.14), CD (AAPC, 8.34%; 95% CI, 4.38 to 12.29), and UC (AAPC, 3.90; 95% CI, 1.29 to 6.52). No population-based studies were available for developing regions in stage 1 (emergence).Hospitalization rates for IBD are stabilizing in countries in stage 3, whereas newly industrialized countries in stage 2 have rapidly increasing hospitalization rates, contributing to an increasing burden on global health care systems.

Subjects

Subjects :
Hepatology
Gastroenterology

Details

ISSN :
15423565
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd37715a372ff343eb1a7bd260641fe0