AI Article Synopsis

  • Fecal urgency, a symptom of Ulcerative Colitis (UC), was studied to understand its association with patient characteristics and treatment changes among 400 patients in the CorEvitas Inflammatory Bowel Disease Registry.
  • The study classified patients into four groups based on their urgency status at enrollment and after 6 months, finding that those with persistent or changing urgency reported more comorbidities and had worse overall health outcomes.
  • Results indicated that patients experiencing urgency were more likely to change treatments within the 6-month follow-up, suggesting urgency may indicate inadequate therapy and negatively impacts quality of life.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Fecal urgency is a common symptom of Ulcerative Colitis (UC). We explored the association between changes in fecal urgency for patient characteristics and evaluated the association between change in treatment and change in fecal urgency.

Methods: The study cohort (n = 400) included UC patients in the CorEvitas Inflammatory Bowel Disease Registry between May 3, 2017 and September 1, 2020. Fecal urgency was defined using the Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index. Urgency groups were formed by urgency at enrollment and 6-month follow-up visit: no persistent urgency at both visits (NPU); change from urgency to no urgency (UN); change from no urgency to urgency (NU); and persistent urgency at both visits (PU). Descriptive statistics were used to explore between urgency group differences at baseline and Kaplan-Meier curves to compare time to first treatment change.

Results: Groups included NPU (n = 175), UN (n = 86), NU (n = 56), and PU (n = 83). At enrollment, we found differences between groups for increased depression, anxiety, prior infections, diabetes; also, greater fatigue, pain, work impairment, work hours affected, and daily activities impacted. Compared to NPU patients, UN, NU, and PU patients were more likely to change treatment between enrollment and 6-month follow-up visit, and a higher proportion of UN, NU, and PU patients on a biologic at enrollment changed treatment vs the NPU group between both visits.

Conclusion: Among real-world UC patients, fecal urgency status is associated with increased comorbidities and worse patient-reported outcomes and significant differences in change of treatment and time to treatment change. Urgency at any time point diminishes quality of life and may be a sign of inadequate therapy, which often is an indication to switch therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11308049PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gastha.2023.03.024DOI Listing

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