Chronic Sinonasal Disease in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease

2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
David T. Book ◽  
Timothy L. Smith ◽  
Justin P. Mcnamar ◽  
Kia Saeian ◽  
David G. Binion ◽  
...  

Background The objective of this study was to explore the possible relationship between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and chronic sinonasal disease. Methods A cross-sectional study was undertaken of 241 patients with Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis from a tertiary medical center IBD clinic. Patient demographic data and information regarding IBD diagnosis and management, sinonasal disease diagnosis and management, and complications related to these diagnoses were gathered by retrospective chart review and a standardized patient survey. Results One hundred sixty surveys (67%) were returned and analyzed. Overall, 48% of patients with IBD reported chronic sinonasal disease symptoms. Patients with CD had a higher prevalence of sinonasal disease than patients with ulcerative colitis (53% versus 32%; p < 0.02). The subgroup of CD patients with obstructive bowel complications had the highest prevalence of sinonasal disease (68% versus 27%; p = < 0.001), with 23% reporting chronic rhinosinusitis, 13% reporting chronic rhinitis, and an additional 32% reporting chronic nasal or sinus symptoms. Conclusion The prevalence of chronic sinonasal disease is elevated in patients with IBD, occurring in approximately one-half of patients followed at a tertiary IBD center. Patients with CD experiencing obstructive complications had significantly increased rates of sinonasal disease. The relationship between chronic sinonasal disease and obstructive CD is not defined, but several hypotheses are generated.

Vaccines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 55
Author(s):  
Mohammad Shehab ◽  
Yasmin Zurba ◽  
Ali Al Abdulsalam ◽  
Ahmad Alfadhli ◽  
Sara Elouali

Background: COVID-19 vaccinations have been shown to be effective in reducing risk of severe infection, hospitalization, and death. They have also been shown to be safe and effective in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who are receiving biologic therapies. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the prevalence of vaccination among patients receiving biologic therapies for IBD. Methods: A single-center prospective cross-sectional study conducted at a tertiary care inflammatory bowel disease center in Kuwait. Data from patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) who attended the gastroenterology infusion clinic from 1 June 2021 until 31 October 2021 were retrieved. Patients who received infliximab or vedolizumab at least six weeks before recruitment were included. The primary outcome was prevalence of COVID-19 vaccination. The secondary outcome was to assess whether prevalence of COVID-19 vaccination differed based on sex, age, type of biologic therapy and nationality. Results: The total number of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients enrolled in the study was 280 (56.0% male and 44.0% female). Of the total, 112 (40.0%) patients were diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and 168 (60.0%) with Crohn’s disease. The number of ulcerative colitis patients who were vaccinated was 49 (43.8%) and the number of Crohn’s disease patients who were vaccinated was 68 (40.5%). The median age was 33.2 years and BMI was 24.8 kg/m2. With respect to the total number of patients, 117 (41.8%) were vaccinated with either BNT162b2 or ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 and 163 (58.2%) were not vaccinated. Female patients were more likely to receive the vaccine compared to male patients (83.0% vs. 63.8%, p < 0.001). In addition, patients above the age 50 were more likely to receive the vaccine than patients below the age of 50 (95.6% vs. 31.2% p < 0.001). Expatriates were more likely to receive the vaccine than citizens (84.8% vs. 25.0%, p < 0.001). There was no statistical difference between patients on infliximab and vedolizumab with regard to prevalence of vaccination (40.0% vs 48.0%, p = 0.34). Conclusion: The overall prevalence of COVID-19 vaccination among patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) on biologic therapies was lower than that of the general population and world health organization (WHO) recom-mendation. Female patients, patients above the age of 50, and expatriates were more likely to receive the vaccine. Physicians should reinforce the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines among patients, especially IBD patients on biologic therapies, who express hesitancy towards them.


2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-497
Author(s):  
Adhan Amenomori WU ◽  
Jaqueline Ribeiro de BARROS ◽  
Madhoor RAMDEEN ◽  
Julio Pinheiro BAIMA ◽  
Rogerio SAAD-HOSSNE ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Biological therapy and new drugs have revolutionized the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. Ideally, the choice of medication should be a shared decision with the patient, aiming at greater satisfaction, compliance, and consequently, favorable clinical outcome. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to evaluate patient’s preferences in the choice of their therapy and the factors that influence this choice. METHODS: This cross-sectional study enrolled 101 outpatients with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis. The inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years and no previous exposure to biological therapy. Patients’ preferences were assessed through questions that addressed the preferred mode of administration (oral, subcutaneous, or intravenous) and the factors that determined the choice of medication (efficacy, medical indication, fear of medication, convenience, mode of application, and personal doctors’ indication). RESULTS: The mean age was 43.6±13.5 years, 75.3% were female, and 81.2% were cases of ulcerative colitis. Regarding the mode of administration, the majority of patients preferred oral (87.1%), followed by intravenous (6.93%) and subcutaneous (5.94%) medications. The reasons were “I prefer to take it at home” (42.57%), “I have more freedom” (36.63%), “I don’t like self-application” (29.70%), and “I believe it works better” (19.80%). Younger patients and patients in clinical disease activity preferred intravenous mode compared to the oral route (P<0.05). Doctor’s opinion (98%) was an important factor associated with the medication choice. CONCLUSION: Oral route was the preferred mode of administration and most patients took their physician’s opinion into account in their choice of medication.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S608-S608
Author(s):  
D Farrell ◽  
P Bager ◽  
F Bredin ◽  
V Cairnes ◽  
M Forry ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) often experience the problematic and burdensome symptom of fatigue, both during periods of relapse and remission. The optimal management of fatigue in IBD is uncertain, however there is evidence suggesting that physical activity is likely to be a beneficial way of managing the symptom. The aim of this study is to explore the relationship between fatigue and objective measurements of both physical activity metrics and varying intensities of physical activity for individuals with IBD. Methods A multi-centred, European, cross-sectional, correlational study was employed. A consecutive sample of 187 patients with Crohn’s disease (59%) or ulcerative colitis (41%) were recruited from six IBD centres in the Republic of Ireland (42%), United Kingdom (40%) and Denmark (18%). Fatigue was measured using the IBD-Fatigue (IBD-F) scale, including both the level of fatigue (IBD-F, Section 1) and impact of fatigue (IBD-F, Section 2). Physical activity was objectively measured using scientifically validated triaxial accelerometers (ActiGraph wGT3X-BT) during seven consecutive days. Results A moderate level of fatigue (IBD-F Section 1 Md (IQR) = 10 (6 – 13)), predominantly intermittent in nature (72%) was reported by participants (57.4% female; 59% Crohn’s disease; 43% active disease). Participants self-reported sleeping an average of 8.7 hours over the seven nights. During the week, the intensity of activity was predominantly sedentary (Md 5 days, 22 hours, 20 minutes) or light (Md 19 hours, 35 minutes). The median moderate-to-vigorous intensity of physical activity per day was 32.2 minutes and step count over the week was 47052 steps. There was no evidence of a unique linear or non-linear relationship between each of the objective measurements of physical activity with IBD-related fatigue. This lack of evidence extended separately to patients in remission and to patients with active disease. These findings are in the context of a statistically significant moderately-strong relationship between disease activity (measured using both HBI and SCCAI) and level of fatigue for both patients of Crohn’s disease (rs = .327, p = .001, n = 96) and ulcerative colitis (rs = .353, p = .003, n = 71). Conclusion This large multi-centred study shows no association between objective measurements of physical activity and IBD-fatigue. These findings suggest that engaging or not engaging in physical activity has no differential impact on self-assessment of fatigue.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 2753
Author(s):  
Asaf Levartovsky ◽  
Yiftach Barash ◽  
Shomron Ben-Horin ◽  
Bella Ungar ◽  
Eyal Klang ◽  
...  

Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have a high risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) events in both hospitalized patients and outpatients. Although thromboprophylaxis is recommended for hospitalized patients with IBD, implementation is not universal, especially for non IBD-related hospitalizations. Our objective was to present VTE and thromboprophylaxis adherence rates among hospitalized patients with IBD. An electronic data repository was created of all patients with IBD who visited the emergency department (ED) of our tertiary medical center between 2012 and 2018. The data included tabular variables and free-text physician records. We searched the data for VTE events, using ICD10 coding. Overall, there were 7009 ED visits of 2405 patients with IBD, 1556 (64.7%) with Crohn’s disease (CD) and 849 (35.3%) with ulcerative colitis (UC). Thromboprophylaxis was administered in 463 hospitalizations (12.4% of IBD-related and 10.9% of non IBD-related hospitalizations, p = 0.13). Nineteen VTEs were diagnosed in the ED and seventeen were diagnosed during hospitalization (11 non IBD-related and 6 IBD-related hospitalizations, 0.6% and 0.28% respectively, p = 0.12). One patient died during hospitalization and an additional two in the 90 days post-discharge from hospitalization (unrelated to VTEs). In conclusion, thromboprophylaxis rates in hospitalized patients with IBD are low, despite possible implications and established guidelines. Thromboprophylaxis should be implemented in patients with IBD hospitalized for all indications.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin Lye auf der STRASSE ◽  
Carmen Mayanna JAMUR ◽  
Janaina MARQUES ◽  
Mirian Su Mi KIM ◽  
Ricardo Rasmussen PETTERLE ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: Treatment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) includes a variety of immunosuppressants and biological agents, which increase the risk of infections due to altered cellular and humoral immunity. Prevention of these infections can be done through vaccination, however, patients with IBD are usually under-immunized. OBJECTIVE: Analyze the immunization status of patients with IBD and confront it with the current recommendations to verify if the immunization guidelines are being followed correctly. METHODS: Analytical cross-sectional study including 239 IBD patients being regularly followed in the Gastroenterology Service from Hospital de Clínicas da Universidade Federal do Paraná, which were subjected to a survey about their relevant demographic data and immunization status. RESULTS: The amount of patients that declared being unaware of their immunization status is high - between 34.3% (Tdap) and 52% (meningococcal) - excepting IIV, hepatitis B and HPV. The vaccines with the largest rates of patients declaring to have taken it are inactivated influenza vaccine (72.4%), BCG (55.3%), hepatitis B (48.3%), measles, mumps and rubella vaccine (43.8%) and DTaP (43%). The vaccines with the lowest rates of patients declaring to have taken it are Haemophilus influenza type b (0.8%), herpes zoster (2.1%) and HPV (3.4%). Patients that are being treated or have been treated with biological therapy have the largest immunization coverage for inactivated influenza vaccine (81%) and PPSV23 (25.9%), also they have the largest awareness rates for those vaccines. CONCLUSION: Although being a specialized service linked to a university hospital, vaccination coverage and patients’ awareness rates proved to be below the desirable level. Vaccination and recovery of the immunization history is recommended immediately after the diagnosis of IBD, regardless of the use of biological agents. Those findings support the need of implementing hospital guidelines and constantly verifying its application by the multidisciplinary team in specialized services in IBD.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S636-S637
Author(s):  
T Khoury ◽  
A Shafrir ◽  
I Kalisky ◽  
M Safadi ◽  
A Mari ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients have twice the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) compared with healthy controls. VTE can occur at both hospitalisation and after discharge. We aimed to assess the prevalence of VTE among IBD patients who were hospitalised with disease flare at three Israeli Hospitals. Methods A retrospective cross-sectional analysis including all IBD patients who were admitted with disease flare at Galilee Medical Center, EMMS Nazareth Hospital and Hadassah Medical Center. Exclusion criteria were patients with confirmed diagnosis of hypercoagulable state or patients on drugs with pro-coagulable potential. Results Eighty-one patients with overall 114 admissions were included in the study. The average age was 42.2 ± 18.5 years. Sixty-six patients (57.9%) were males. Forty-five admissions (39.5%) were due to ulcerative colitis (UC) flare and 69 admissions (60.5%) were secondary to Crohn’s disease (CD) flare. Twenty-eight patients (24.6%) were smokers. Twenty-five patients (21.9%) and 39 patients (34.2%) were on recent biological and steroid treatment (within 3 months). The mean C-reactive protein and albumin levels at the day of discharge were 4.2 ± 4.6 mg/dl (normal range 0–0.5) and 3.5 ± 0.7 g/dl (normal values above 3.2), respectively. During hospitalisation, 57 (50%), 55 (48.2%), 29 (25.4%), 19 (16.7%) and 8 (7%) patients were treated with intravenous steroids, antibiotics, amino-salicylates, surgery and immunomodulators, respectively. Only four patients (3.5 %) were on prophylactic subcutaneous anticoagulation (enoxaparin) throughout their hospital stay and only 1 patient (0.9%) who have not been on anticoagulation developed in-hospital symptomatic VTE episode. Notably, this patient suffering from CD with ileo-colonic involvement developed subclavian vein thrombosis two day after PICC line insertion for total parenteral nutrition to optimise his nutritional state before performing surgery. The mean hospitalisation length was 6.5 ± 6.6 days. Conclusion In-hospital VTE was rare among our IBD patients admitted with disease flare. In fact, the only one VTE event reported in our cohort is probably related to the PICC line insertion and not related to IBD flare. Notably undergoing surgery in our cohort was not correlated with VTE episodes. Further studies are warranted to characterise IBD patients at risk for VTE, to assess the risk factors for in-hospital VTE development and to address further the role of prophylactic anticoagulation among hospitalised IBD patients, mainly those with bloody diarrhoea.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 412-420
Author(s):  
Katsuhiro Arai ◽  
Reiko Kunisaki ◽  
Fumihiko Kakuta ◽  
Shin-ichiro Hagiwara ◽  
Takatsugu Murakoshi ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: There are few published registry studies from Asia on pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Registry network data enable comparisons among ethnic groups. This study examined the characteristics of IBD in Japanese children and compared them with those in European children.Methods: This was a cross-sectional multicenter registry study of newly diagnosed Japanese pediatric IBD patients. The Paris classification was used to categorize IBD features, and results were compared with published EUROKIDS data.Results: A total of 265 pediatric IBD patients were initially registered, with 22 later excluded for having incomplete demographic data. For the analysis, 91 Crohn’s disease (CD), 146 ulcerative colitis (UC), and 6 IBD-unclassified cases were eligible. For age at diagnosis, 20.9% of CD, 21.9% of UC, and 83.3% of IBD-unclassified cases were diagnosed before age 10 years. For CD location, 18.7%, 13.2%, 64.8%, 47.3%, and 20.9% were classified as involving L1 (ileocecum), L2 (colon), L3 (ileocolon), L4a (esophagus/stomach/duodenum), and L4b (jejunum/proximal ileum), respectively. For UC extent, 76% were classified as E4 (pancolitis). For CD behavior, B1 (non-stricturing/non-penetrating), B2 (stricturing), B3 (penetrating), and B2B3 were seen in 83.5%, 11.0%, 3.3%, and 2.2%, respectively. A comparison between Japanese and European children showed less L2 involvement (13.2% vs. 27.3%, <i>P</i>< 0.01) but more L4a (47.3% vs. 29.6%, <i>P</i>< 0.01) and L3 (64.8% vs. 52.7%, <i>P</i>< 0.05) involvement in Japanese CD children. Pediatric perianal CD was more prevalent in Japanese children (34.1% vs. 9.7%, <i>P</i>< 0.01).Conclusions: Upper gastrointestinal and perianal CD lesions are more common in Japanese children than in European children.


2021 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alba Santiago Badenas ◽  
Elena F Verdu

nflammatory bowel disease is an immune mediated condition that includes Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis and causes chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. Although the exact cause for inflammatory bowel disease is unknown, there is consensus that a combination of genetic, environmental, and immune factors participate in its pathogenesis. To date, all the studies have been focused on alterations that occur once IBD has developed, however, the causes triggering the onset of the disease are still unclear. There is an evident genetic basis in which multiple genes involved in intestinal homeostasis are affected, such as NOD2, ATG16L1 and XBP1. However, these genetic factors are not sufficient for disease onset and additional environmental factors such as those related to dysregulation of gut microbiota and the immune system are required. A lower microbial diversity and a decrease in the relative abundance of Firmicutes, as well as an increase in Proteobacteria, have been described in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, but are not found in all studies. In addition to variations in microbial composition, functional changes have also been observed in cross-sectional studies. Longitudinal cohorts in patients at risk for inflammatory bowel disease have recently been conducted allowing us to interrogate whether specific microbial communities and functions could be influencing the onset of the disease. Indeed, a translational study performed in a cohort of at-risk individuals for inflammatory bowel disease (GEM cohort) showed an increased fecal proteolytic activity, associated with microbial composition changes, before the onset of ulcerative colitis. These findings may help develop new non-invasive diagnostic techniques, as well as new therapeutical approaches for inflammatory bowel disease.


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