Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease Type Unclassified: A Nationwide Cohort Study in Scotland With up to 20 Years Follow-up Shows Reclassification in the Majority and Mild Course in Those Whose Diagnosis Is Unchanged

David I. F. Wands, Laura Gianolio, Fiona Cameron, Richard Hansen, Richard K. Russell, David C. Wilson (Lead / Corresponding author)

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Given the paucity of long-term longitudinal data for inflammatory bowel disease type unclassified (IBDU), we aimed to clarify IBDU disease course and reclassification rate by presenting nationwide data with up to 20 years of follow-up.

Methods: We analyzed a prospectively identified 11-year cohort of pediatric patients diagnosed with IBDU between January 1, 2003 and December 31, 2013 at all Scottish pediatric IBD centers and followed up into adult services until December 31, 2022. Data were obtained from electronic medical records at fixed timepoints (5 and 10 years post-diagnosis) and at the final follow-up.

Results: Overall, 102 patients were included in the analysis (57/102 [56%] male, median [interquartile range {IQR}] age at diagnosis: 11.5 [9.1-13.2] years) with a median (IQR) follow-up length of 10.5 (8.6-14.0) years. A change of diagnosis was made in 61 of 102 patients (60%); of these, 30 patients (29%) were reclassified to Crohn’s disease (CD) and 31 patients (30%) to ulcerative colitis (UC). Patients who remained with IBDU had higher 1- to 5-year remission rates (IBDU 30/39 [77%] vs reclassified 16/57 [28%], P < .05), with lower rates of moderate-to-severe disease (IBDU 3/39 [8%] vs reclassified 31/57 [54%], P < .05) and less need for biologics across all timepoints (IBDU vs reclassified: first timepoint 1/39 [3%] vs 17/57 [30%], second timepoint 1/33 [3%] vs 26/56 [46%], third timepoint 0/18 [0%] vs 16/33 [49%]; all P < .05). Higher rates of surgical resections were observed in reclassified patients (reclassified 11/61 [18%] vs IBDU 1/41 [2%], P = .02).

Conclusions: In our nationwide pediatric IBDU cohort, 60% of patients were reclassified to either UC or CD over 10.5 years of median follow-up; those who remained with IBDU had a milder disease course.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberizae218
Number of pages8
JournalInflammatory Bowel Diseases
Early online date25 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 25 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • pediatrics
  • inflammatory bowel disease type unclassified
  • indeterminate colitis
  • epidemiology

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