Improved Healthcare Access Reduces Requirements for Surgery in Indigent IBD Patients Using Biologic Therapy: A ‘Safety-Net’ Hospital Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Patient Population
2.2. Outcomes
2.3. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Cohort
3.2. Healthcare Outcomes
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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FAP Records (n = 185) | Non-FAP Records (n = 73) | p-Value | |
---|---|---|---|
Mean Age (Standard deviation (SD)) | 39 (12.7) | 39.2 (13.1) | 0.916 (Bin. Log. Reg.) |
Mean Body Mass Index (SD, kg/m2) | 27.6 (6.8) | 27.1 (7.7) | 0.576 (Bin. Log. Reg.) |
Current Smoker, n (%) | 12 (11.3) | 8 (20.0) | 0.276 (Chi Square) |
Mean Disease Duration (SD, years) | 8.4 (8.2) | 10.5 (9.9) | 0.095 (Chi Square) |
Active Meds @time of biologic initiation, n (%) | |||
Steroid | 79 (42.7) | 36 (49.3) | 0.410 (Chi Square) |
5-ASA | 113 (61.1) | 36 (49.3) | 0.113 (Chi Square) |
Immunomodulator | 108 (58.4) | 40 (54.8) | 0.700 (Chi Square) |
Biologic | 70 (37.8) | 23 (33.3) | 0.418 (Chi Square) |
Prior IBD-related surgery, n (%) | 36 (19.6) | 28 (38.4) | 0.003 (Chi Square) |
Biologic naïve, n (%) | 107 (58.2) | 43 (58.9) | 1 (Chi Square) |
Healthcare access | |||
Mean # of clinic visits (SD) | 3.0 (1.4) | 3.0 (1.3) | 0.942 (Wilcoxon) |
Days between Rx and initiation of biologic agent (SD) | 31.6 (41.2) | 42.8 (62.4) | 0.104 (Wilcoxon) |
FAP Patients (n = 140) | Non-FAP Patients (n = 64) | p-Value | |
---|---|---|---|
Female, n (%) | 59 (42.1) | 38 (59.4) | 0.032 |
Race, n (%) | <0.001 | ||
White | 36 (25.7) | 17 (26.6) | |
Black | 35 (25.0) | 35 (54.7) | |
Hispanic | 64 (45.7) | 9 (12.3) | |
Asian | 4 (2.9) | 3 (4.7) | |
Other | 1 (0.7) | 0 | |
IBD Diagnosis, n (%) | 0.137 | ||
Ulcerative colitis | 70 (50) | 22 (34.4) | |
Crohn’s disease | 69 (49.3) | 40 (62.5) | |
IBD-Unclassified | 4 (2.9) | 2 (3.1) | |
Mean number of Biologics | 1.32 (0.55) | 1.14 (0.47) | 0.002 (Wilcoxon) |
Crohn’s Disease Location, n (% of CD patients) | 0.057 | ||
Small bowel | 9 (13) | 6 (15) | |
Colonic | 24 (34.8) | 10 (25) | |
Ileocolonic | 37 (53.6) | 22 (55) | |
Upper GI Involvement, n (% of CD patients) | 7 (15.6) | 1 (3.3) | 0.184 |
Complex CD behavior, n (% of CD patients) | 35 (50.7) | 28 (70) | 0.033 |
Perianal Crohn’s disease, n (% of CD patients) | 23 (33.3) | 16 (40.0) | 0.518 |
Ulcerative colitis Location, n (% of UC patients) | 0.098 | ||
Proctitis | 0 | 0 | |
Left-sided | 14 (20) | 9 (40.9) | |
Pancolonic | 57 (81.4) | 13 (59.1) |
FAP Records (n = 185) | Non-FAP Records (n = 73) | p-Value | Odds Ratio [95% CI] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Clinical outcomes, n (%) | ||||
Clinical remission at 6 months | 60 (38.2) | 21 (34.4) | 0.845 | - |
Clinical remission at 12 months | 56 (45.2) | 18 (36) | 0.526 | - |
Healthcare resource utilization | ||||
IBD-related Hospitalization, n (%) | 64 (35.4) | 30 (41.7) | 0.590 | - |
IBD-related surgery, n (%) | 10 (5.6) | 12 (16.7) | 0.034 | 0.28 [0.08–0.91] α |
Mean number of ED visits (SD) | 0.63 (1.65) | 1.03 (4.67) | 0.781 | - |
Mean number of CT and MRI studies in 12 months (SD) | 0.71 (0.96) | 0.92 (1.33) | 0.518 |
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Gu, P.; Clifford, E.; Gilman, A.; Chang, C.; Moss, E.; Fudman, D.I.; Kilgore, P.; Cvek, U.; Trutschl, M.; Alexander, J.S.; et al. Improved Healthcare Access Reduces Requirements for Surgery in Indigent IBD Patients Using Biologic Therapy: A ‘Safety-Net’ Hospital Experience. Pathophysiology 2022, 29, 383-393. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathophysiology29030030
Gu P, Clifford E, Gilman A, Chang C, Moss E, Fudman DI, Kilgore P, Cvek U, Trutschl M, Alexander JS, et al. Improved Healthcare Access Reduces Requirements for Surgery in Indigent IBD Patients Using Biologic Therapy: A ‘Safety-Net’ Hospital Experience. Pathophysiology. 2022; 29(3):383-393. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathophysiology29030030
Chicago/Turabian StyleGu, Phillip, Eric Clifford, Andrew Gilman, Christopher Chang, Elizabeth Moss, David I. Fudman, Phillip Kilgore, Urska Cvek, Marjan Trutschl, J. Steven Alexander, and et al. 2022. "Improved Healthcare Access Reduces Requirements for Surgery in Indigent IBD Patients Using Biologic Therapy: A ‘Safety-Net’ Hospital Experience" Pathophysiology 29, no. 3: 383-393. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathophysiology29030030
APA StyleGu, P., Clifford, E., Gilman, A., Chang, C., Moss, E., Fudman, D. I., Kilgore, P., Cvek, U., Trutschl, M., Alexander, J. S., Burstein, E., & Boktor, M. (2022). Improved Healthcare Access Reduces Requirements for Surgery in Indigent IBD Patients Using Biologic Therapy: A ‘Safety-Net’ Hospital Experience. Pathophysiology, 29(3), 383-393. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathophysiology29030030