Assessing disease control in inflammatory bowel disease: a real world cross-sectional study in the UK (PODCAST-IBD)
Author
de Silva, ShanikaSteed, Helen
Allen, Patrick B
Vegad, Chirag
Crooks, James
Jaulim, Adil
Hart, Ailsa
Affiliation
The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust; The royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust; The Ulster Hospital et alPublication date
2024-10-11
Metadata
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Proportion Of suboptimal Disease Control And Strategy of Treatment in IBD (PODCAST-IBD) was an international real-world study which aimed to quantify disease control in IBD using STRIDE-II recommendations. Cross-sectional assessment of IBD patients attending routine clinic appointments in four UK centers October 2022 to January 2023. Clinician-reported outcomes, patient-reported outcomes and retrospective data from medical chart review were used to assess IBD control against red flags aligned to STRIDE-II. Data were available from 198 UK patients. IBD was suboptimally controlled in 52.4% (54/103) of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) and 45.3% (43/95) with ulcerative colitis (UC). Impaired quality of life (QOL), defined as Short inflammatory bowel disease questionnaire (SIBDQ) score <50, was the main contributor to suboptimal disease control. Suboptimal disease control has a detrimental impact on fatigue and disability with significantly lower mean Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Fatigue (FACIT-F) score in suboptimally controlled disease (CD: 81.5 vs 125, UC: 87.4 vs 122.8) and IBD Disk. Suboptimal disease control results in higher health care resource use (HCRU) (CD: �4,746 vs �1,924; UC: �2,428 vs �1,121) and higher rates of work productivity loss (CD: 41.7% vs 11.9%, UC: 38.0% vs 22.6%). IBD was suboptimally controlled in around one-half of patients. Impaired QOL was the most common contributor (64%, 62/97) to suboptimal control. Suboptimal control had a considerable economic impact; HCRU more than doubled and productivity fell. Physicians could consider regular QOL assessments to prompt timely disease monitoring to enable identification of early active disease and appropriate treatment.Citation
de Silva S, Steed H, Allen PB, Vegad C, Crooks J, Jaulim A, Hart A. Assessing disease control in inflammatory bowel disease: a real world cross-sectional study in the UK (PODCAST-IBD). Curr Med Res Opin. 2024 Nov;40(11):1847-1854. doi: 10.1080/03007995.2024.2410928. Epub 2024 Oct 14. PMID: 39391968.PMID
39391968Publisher
Taylor & Francisae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1080/03007995.2024.2410928