Background and aims The COVID-19 risk and disease course in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients remains uncertain. Therefore, we aimed to assess the clinical presentation, disease course and outcomes of COVID-19 in IBD patients. Second, we determined COVID-19 incidences in IBD patients and compared this with the general population. Methods We conducted a multicenter, nationwide IBD cohort study in the Netherlands and identified patients with COVID-19. First, we assessed the COVID-19 disease course and outcomes. Second, we compared COVID-19 incidences between our IBD study cohort and the general Dutch population. Results We established an IBD cohort of 34,763 patients. COVID-19 was diagnosed in 100/34,763 patients (0.29%). 20/100 patients (20%) had severe COVID-19 defined as admission to the intensive care unit, mechanical ventilation, and/or death. Hospitalization occurred in 59/100 (59.0%) patients and 13/100 (13.0%) died. All patients who deceased had comorbidities and all but one were > 65 years. In line, we identified > 1 comorbidity as an independent risk factor for hospitalization (OR 4.20, 95% CI 1.58-11.17, p = 0.004). Incidences of COVID-19 between the IBD study cohort and the general population were comparable (287.6 (95% CI 236.6-349.7) versus 333.0 (95% CI 329.3-336.7) per 100,000 patients, respectively; p = 0.15). Conclusions Of 100 cases with IBD and COVID-19, 20% developed severe COVID-19, 59% was hospitalized and 13% died. A comparable COVID-19 risk was found between the IBD cohort (100/34,763 = 0.29%) and the general Dutch population. The presence of > 1 comorbidities was an independent risk factor for hospitalization due to COVID-19.
Summary Background Tioguanine (or thioguanine) is an alternative drug for IBD patients who fail prior conventional immunomodulating therapy. Aim To report effectiveness, safety and therapeutic drug monitoring in a cohort of patients with prolonged tioguanine maintenance therapy. Methods In this nationwide, multicentre study, medical records of tioguanine‐ using IBD patients were retrospectively reviewed. Response to therapy was defined as clinical effectiveness without (re)initiation of corticosteroids, concurrent biological therapy or surgical intervention. All adverse events that occurred during the follow‐up were listed and graded according to the common terminology criteria (CTC). Results Two hundred and seventy‐four patients (female 63%, Crohn's disease in 68%) were included with median treatment duration of 51 months, 1567 patient‐years of follow‐up and median 20 mg/d tioguanine dosage. Tioguanine was tolerated in 79%, clinical effectiveness at 6 months was documented in 66% and sustained clinical effectiveness during 12 months in 51% of patients. Forty‐one per cent of patients developed adverse events: 5% were graded as severe. Adverse events comprised infection requiring hospitalisation in three and skin cancer in eight patients (two melanomas). Asymptomatic nodular regenerative hyperplasia of the liver occurred in two out of 52 patients with liver biopsies (3.8%) and portal hypertension in three whereof one potentially associated with tioguanine (0.4%). Clinical effectiveness was correlated with 6‐thioguanine nucleotide threshold concentrations >682 pmol/8×108 RBC (P < 0.05). Conclusions Long‐term tioguanine therapy for at least 12 months was effective in 51% and well tolerated as a maintenance treatment for IBD in about 70% of patients. Adverse events were common, but mainly mild or moderate. 6‐Thioguanine nucleotide threshold concentration ≥ 700 pmol/8×108 RBC is proposed as target level with higher odds for clinical effectiveness.
Background and AimsThe long-term risk of high-grade dysplasia [HGD] and colorectal cancer [CRC] following low-grade dysplasia [LGD] in inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] patients is relatively unknown. We aimed to determine the long-term cumulative incidence of advanced neoplasia [HGD and/or CRC], and to identify risk factors for advanced neoplasia in a nationwide IBD cohort with a history of LGD.MethodsThis is a nationwide cohort study using data from the Dutch National Pathology Registry [PALGA] to identify all IBD patients with LGD between 1991 and 2010 in the Netherlands. Follow-up data were collected until January 2016. We determined the cumulative incidence of advanced neoplasia and identified risk factors via multivariable Cox regression analysis.ResultsWe identified 4284 patients with colonic LGD with a median follow-up of 6.4 years after initial LGD diagnosis. The cumulative incidence of subsequent advanced neoplasia was 3.6, 8.5, 14.4 and 21.7%, after 1, 5, 10 and 15 years, respectively. The median time to develop advanced neoplasia after LGD was 3.6 years. Older age [≥ 55 years] at moment of LGD (hazard ratio [HR] 1.73, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.44–2.06), male sex [HR 1.33, 95% CI 1.10–1.60], and follow-up at an academic [vs non-academic] medical centre [HR 1.37, 95% CI 1.07–1.76] were independent risk factors for advanced neoplasia following LGD.ConclusionsIn a large nationwide cohort with long-term follow-up of IBD patients with LGD, the cumulative incidence of advanced neoplasia was 21.7% after 15 years. Older age at LGD [≥55 years], male sex and follow-up by a tertiary IBD referral centre were independent risk factors for advanced neoplasia development after initial LGD.
Background Safety of thioguanine in pregnant patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is sparsely recorded. This study was aimed to document the safety of thioguanine during pregnancy and in birth. Methods In this multicenter case series, IBD patients treated with thioguanine during pregnancy were included. Data regarding disease and medication history, pregnancy course, obstetric complications and neonatal outcomes were collected. Results Data on 117 thioguanine-exposed pregnancies in 99 women were collected. Most (78%) had Crohn’s disease and the mean age at delivery was 31 years. In eighteen pregnancies (15%) IBD flared. Obstetric and infectious complications were seen in 15% (n=17) and 7% (n=8) of pregnancies, respectively. Ten pregnancies (8.5%) resulted in a first trimester miscarriage and one in a stillbirth at 22 weeks gestational age. Congenital abnormalities were observed in one induced abortion (trisomy 21) and in one of the live-born children (cleft palate) . In total 109 neonates were born from 101 singleton pregnancies and 4 twin pregnancies. In the singleton pregnancies, ten children were born prematurely and ten were born small for gestational age. Screening for myelosuppresion was performed in sixteen neonates (14.7%); two had anemia in umbilical cord blood. All outcomes were comparable to either the general Dutch population or to data from 3 Dutch cohort studies on the use of conventional thiopurines in pregnant IBD patients. Conclusion In this large case series the use of thioguanine during pregnancy is not associated in excess with adverse maternal or neonatal outcomes.
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