O-002 Predicting a Complicated Course for Children Newly Diagnosed with Crohn's Disease: A Multicenter Inception Cohort Study.

Inflamm Bowel Dis
Authors
Abstract

BACKGROUND: A subset of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) rapidly progress to a stricturing or internal penetrating phenotype that requires surgery. Despite great strides in therapy, there have not been population-level declines in the rates of these serious complications or need for surgery in CD. Effective risk stratification models to predict progression to such complications in pediatric CD are presently lacking. We aimed to develop and test a prognostic model incorporating clinical and host biology and integrated the comparative effectiveness of anti-TNF in preventing stricturing or perforating complications.

METHODS: In this inception cohort of CD, 28 sites have recruited a total of 1096 pediatric patients at diagnosis before any therapy was started. The patients were followed prospectively for 36 months and clinical, genetic, serologic and mucosal gene expression data was collected at baseline and progression to stricturing and/or internal penetrating complication was recorded. A competing risk model for disease complications was derived and validated in independent groups. Propensity-score matching tested the effect of anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor (anti-TNF) therapy within 3 months of diagnosis on complication risk.

RESULTS: Of the 1096 total recruited patients, 913 were newly diagnosed uncomplicated pediatric CD patients. Seventy-eight (9%) out of those experienced CD complication within 36 months. Neither isolated ileal disease nor ASCA IgA were associated with stricturing behavior but CBir1 (HR: 2.30 [95% CI, 1.26-4.20], P = 0.007) seropositivity was. Older age at diagnosis (HR: 1.45 [95% CI, 1.17-1.8], P

CONCLUSIONS: We have identified predictable signatures for future development of stricturing and internal penetrating disease at diagnosis when they present with inflammatory phenotype. Our results advance our understanding of the pathogenesis of CD complications, and inform more personalized approaches to the approach of children presenting with a new diagnosis of Crohn's disease.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Inflamm Bowel Dis
Volume
23 Suppl 1
Pages
S1
Date Published
2017 Feb
ISSN
1536-4844
DOI
10.1097/01.MIB.0000512512.23221.2f
PubMed ID
28125550
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