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Impact of COVID-19 on diagnosis and management of paediatric inflammatory bowel disease during lockdown: a UK nationwide study

Authors :
Jenny Epstein
Maureen Lawson
David Devadason
Franco Torrente
Richard Hansen
Veena Zamvar
Robert Mark Beattie
Lucy Howarth
James J. Ashton
Ahmed Kadir
Rafeeq Muhammed
Jochen Kammermeier
Protima Deb
Priya Narula
Richard K Russell
Elizabeth Renji
Fevronia Kiparissi
Christine Spray
Ben Hope
Hemant S. Bhavsar
Thankam Paul
Source :
Archives of Disease in Childhood
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundCOVID-19 has impacted on healthcare provision. Anecdotally, investigations for children with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have been restricted, resulting in diagnosis with no histological confirmation and potential secondary morbidity. In this study, we detail practice across the UK to assess impact on services and document the impact of the pandemic.MethodsFor the month of April 2020, 20 tertiary paediatric IBD centres were invited to contribute data detailing: (1) diagnosis/management of suspected new patients with IBD; (2) facilities available; (3) ongoing management of IBD; and (4) direct impact of COVID-19 on patients with IBD.ResultsAll centres contributed. Two centres retained routine endoscopy, with three unable to perform even urgent IBD endoscopy. 122 patients were diagnosed with IBD, and 53.3% (n=65) were presumed diagnoses and had not undergone endoscopy with histological confirmation. The most common induction was exclusive enteral nutrition (44.6%). No patients with a presumed rather than confirmed diagnosis were started on anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) therapy.Most IBD follow-up appointments were able to occur using phone/webcam or face to face. No biologics/immunomodulators were stopped. All centres were able to continue IBD surgery if required, with 14 procedures occurring across seven centres.ConclusionsDiagnostic IBD practice has been hugely impacted by COVID-19, with >50% of new diagnoses not having endoscopy. To date, therapy and review of known paediatric patients with IBD has continued. Planning and resourcing for recovery is crucial to minimise continued secondary morbidity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14682044 and 00039888
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Disease in Childhood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8254db7bc73424416094ff5584aece0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2020-319751