Back to Search Start Over

The natural history of COVID-19 in patients with inflammatory bowel disease: a nationwide study by the Hellenic Society for the study of IBD

Authors :
Bamias, G. Kokkotis, G. Christidou, A. Christodoulou, D.K. Delis, V. Diamantopoulou, G. Fessatou, S. Gatopoulou, A. Giouleme, O. Kafritsa, P. Kalantzis, C. Kapsoritakis, A. Karatzas, P. Karmiris, K. Katsanos, K. Kevrekidou, P. Kosmidis, C. Mantaka, A. Mathou, N. Michalopoulos, G. Michopoulos, S. Papaconstantinou, I. Papatheodoridis, G. Polymeros, D. Potamianos, S. Poulopoulos, G. Protopapas, A. Sklavaina, M. Soufleris, K. Theocharis, G. Theodoropoulou, A. Triantafillidis, J.K. Triantafyllou, K. Tsiolakidou, G. Tsironi, E. Tzouvala, M. Viazis, N. Xourgias, V. Zacharopoulou, E. Zampeli, E. Mantzaris, G.J.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: COVID-19 has evolved into a global health crisis, variably affecting the management of patients with chronic illnesses. Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) may represent a vulnerable population due to frequent administration of immune-modifying treatments. We aimed to depict the natural history of COVID-19 infection in Greek patients with IBD at a nationwide level via unbiased reporting of all cases that were registered during the sequential waves of the pandemic. METHODS: Following a national call from the Hellenic Society for the study of IBD, we enrolled all IBD patients with established diagnoses of COVID-19. Clinical and epidemiological data, including COVID-19 modifying factors and IBD-associated therapies, were analyzed against adverse outcomes (hospitalization, ICU admission and death). RESULTS: We identified 154 IBD patients who were diagnosed with COVID-19 (men: 58.4%; mean age=41.7 years [SD = 14.9]; CD: 64.3%). Adverse outcomes were reported in 34 patients (22.1%), including 3 ICU admissions (1.9%) and two deaths (1.3%). Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that age (OR = 1.04, 95% CI, 1-1.08) and dyspnea at presentation (OR = 7.36, 95% CI, 1.84-29.46) were associated with worse outcomes of COVID-19 infection. In contrast, treatment with biologics, in particular anti-TNF agents, exerted a protective effect against an unfavorable COVID-19 disease course (OR = 0.4, 95% CI, 0.16-0.99). Patients on subcutaneous biologics were more likely to halt treatment due to the infection as compared to those on intravenous biologics. CONCLUSIONS: IBD patients who developed COVID-19 had a benign course with adverse outcomes being infrequent. Treatment with anti-TNF biologics had a protective effect, thus, supporting continuation of therapy during the pandemic. Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..d0dfef7d4989fc4870e2a9ca7b72d13e