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Treatment adaptations and outcomes of patients experiencing inflammatory bowel disease flares during the early COVID-19 pandemic: the PREPARE-IBD multicentre cohort study

Saifuddin, Aamir; Kent, Alexandra J.; Mehta, Shameer J.; Hicks, Lucy C.; Gonzalez, Haidee A.; Segal, Jonathan P.; Brookes, Matthew J.; Subramanian, Sreedhar; Bhala, Neeraj; Conley, Thomas E.; Patel, Kamal V.; Lamb, Christopher A.; Walker, Gareth J.; Kennedy, Nicholas A.; Sebastian, Shaji; PREPARE‐IBD Collaborators

Authors

Aamir Saifuddin

Alexandra J. Kent

Shameer J. Mehta

Lucy C. Hicks

Haidee A. Gonzalez

Jonathan P. Segal

Matthew J. Brookes

Sreedhar Subramanian

Neeraj Bhala

Thomas E. Conley

Kamal V. Patel

Christopher A. Lamb

Gareth J. Walker

Nicholas A. Kennedy

Shaji Sebastian

PREPARE‐IBD Collaborators



Contributors

Abstract

Background:

The COVID-19 pandemic offered a unique opportunity to understand inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) management during unexpected disruption. This could help to guide practice overall.

Aims:

To compare prescribing behaviour for IBD flares and outcomes during the early pandemic with pre-pandemic findings.

Methods:

We performed an observational cohort study comprising patients who contacted IBD teams for symptomatic flares between March and June 2020 in 60 National Health Service trusts in the United Kingdom. Data were compared with a pre-pandemic cohort after propensity-matching for age and physician global assessment of disease activity.

Results:

We included 1864 patients in each of the pandemic and pre-pandemic cohorts. The principal findings were reduced systemic corticosteroid prescription during the pandemicin Crohn's disease (prednisolone: pandemic 26.5% vs. 37.1%; p < 0.001) and ulcerative colitis (UC) (prednisolone: pandemic 33.5% vs. 40.7%, p < 0.001), with increases in poorly bioavailable oral corticosteroids in Crohn's (pandemic 15.6% vs. 6.8%; p < 0.001) and UC (pandemic 11.8% vs. 5.2%; p < 0.001). Ustekinumab (Crohn's and UC) and vedolizumab (UC) treatment also significantly increased. Three-month steroid-free remission in each period was similar in Crohn's (pandemic 28.4% vs. 32.1%; p=0.17) and UC (pandemic 36.4% vs. 40.2%; p=0.095). Patients experiencing a flare and suspected COVID-19 were more likely to have moderately-to-severely active disease at 3 months than those with a flare alone.

Conclusions:

Despite treatment adaptations during the pandemic, steroid-free outcomes were comparable with pre-pandemic levels, although concurrent flare and suspected COVID-19 caused worse outcomes. These findings have implications for IBD management during future pandemics and for standard practice.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 5, 2022
Online Publication Date Oct 5, 2022
Publication Date 2022-11
Deposit Date Oct 30, 2023
Journal Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Print ISSN 0269-2813
Electronic ISSN 1365-2036
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 56
Issue 10
Pages 1460-1474
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/apt.17223
Keywords Pharmacology (medical); Gastroenterology; Hepatology
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/26797893
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/apt.17223
Additional Information Received: 2022-05-20; Accepted: 2022-09-05; Published: 2022-10-05