Summary
Background
Anti‐tumour necrosis factor‐α (anti‐TNF) therapy use has risen in paediatric‐onset inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD). Whether this has translated into preventing/delaying childhood surgery is uncertain. The Wessex PIBD cohort was analysed for trends in anti‐TNF‐therapy and surgery.
Aim
To assess patients diagnosed with PIBD within Wessex from 1997 to 2017. The prevalence of anti‐TNF‐therapy and yearly surgery rates (resection and perianal) during childhood (<18 years) were analysed (Pearson's correlation, multivariate regression, Fisher's exact).
Results
Eight‐hundred‐and‐twenty‐five children were included (498 Crohn's disease, 272 ulcerative colitis, 55 IBD‐unclassified), mean age at diagnosis 13.6 years (1.6‐17.6), 39.6% female. The prevalence of anti‐TNF‐treated patients increased from 5.1% to 27.1% (2007‐2017), P = 0.0001. Surgical resection‐rate fell (7.1%‐1.5%, P = 0.001), driven by a decrease in Crohn's disease resections (8.9%‐2.3%, P = 0.001). Perianal surgery and ulcerative colitis resection‐rates were unchanged. Time from diagnosis to resection increased (1.6‐2.8 years, P = 0.028) but mean age at resection was unchanged. Patients undergoing resections during childhood were diagnosed at a younger age in the most recent 5 years (2007‐2011 = 13.1 years, 2013‐2017 = 11.9 years, P = 0.014).
Resection‐rate in anti‐TNF‐therapy treated (16.1%) or untreated (12.2%) was no different (P = 0.25). Patients started on anti‐TNF‐therapy <3 years post‐diagnosis (11.6%) vs later (28.6%) had a reduction in resections, P = 0.047. Anti‐TNF‐therapy prevalence was the only significant predictor of resection‐rate using multivariate regression (P = 0.011).
Conclusions
The prevalence of anti‐TNF‐therapy increased significantly, alongside a decrease in surgical resection‐rate. Patients diagnosed at younger ages still underwent surgery during childhood. Anti‐TNF‐therapy may reduce the need for surgical intervention in childhood, thereby influencing the natural history of PIBD.