Does End-to-End vs Side-to-Side Anastomosis in Postoperative Crohn’s Disease Matter? Prospective 2-Year Evaluation of Postoperative Quality of Life, Health Care Utilization, and Clinical Activity

2014 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. S520
Author(s):  
Mahesh Gajendran ◽  
Claudia Ramos Rivers ◽  
Jana Hashash ◽  
Miguel Regueiro ◽  
Andrew Watson ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Katherine A Traino ◽  
Christina M Sharkey ◽  
Megan N Perez ◽  
Dana M Bakula ◽  
Caroline M Roberts ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective To identify possible subgroups of health care utilization (HCU) patterns among adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with a chronic medical condition (CMC), and examine how these patterns relate to transition readiness and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Methods Undergraduates (N = 359; Mage=19.51 years, SD = 1.31) with a self-reported CMC (e.g., asthma, allergies, irritable bowel syndrome) completed measures of demographics, HCU (e.g., presence of specialty or adult providers, recent medical visits), transition readiness, and mental HRQoL (MHC) and physical HRQoL (PHC). Latent class analysis identified four distinct patterns of HCU. The BCH procedure evaluated how these patterns related to transition readiness and HRQoL outcomes. Results Based on seven indicators of HCU, a four-class model was found to have optimal fit. Classes were termed High Utilization (n = 95), Adult Primary Care Physician (PCP)-Moderate Utilization (n = 107), Family PCP-Moderate Utilization (n = 81), and Low Utilization (n = 76). Age, family income, and illness controllability predicted class membership. Class membership predicted transition readiness and PHC, but not MHC. The High Utilization group reported the highest transition readiness and the lowest HRQoL, while the Low Utilization group reported the lowest transition readiness and highest HRQoL. Conclusions The present study characterizes the varying degrees to which AYAs with CMCs utilize health care. Our findings suggest poorer PHC may result in higher HCU, and that greater skills and health care engagement may not be sufficient for optimizing HRQoL. Future research should examine the High Utilization subgroup and their risk for poorer HRQoL.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (8) ◽  
pp. 935-944 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason G. Andrade ◽  
Laurent Macle ◽  
Atul Verma ◽  
Marc W. Deyell ◽  
Jean Champagne ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 142 (5) ◽  
pp. S-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahesh Gajendran ◽  
Andrew R. Watson ◽  
Wolfgang H. Schraut ◽  
Miguel Regueiro ◽  
Eva Szigethy ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S200-S201
Author(s):  
V Straksyte ◽  
G Kiudelis ◽  
L Kupcinskas ◽  
I Zaboriene

Abstract Background Crohn’s disease (CD) is one of the subtypes of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease and is characterised by continuing inflammation and progressive gut damage. Despite many scoring indices of CD, there is a lack of more global assessment tools for the evaluation of the total disease impact on the gut. Methods One hundred adult patients with proven CD underwent magnetic resonance enterocolonography (MR-EC), colonoscopy and clinical activity assessment. Patients’ quality of life was assessed by IBDQ. MR-EC was used to evaluate the Magnetic Resonance Index of Activity (MaRIA- global (G)), modified (m)MaRIA-G, Clermont-G and the Lemann Index (LI). The CD Endoscopic Index of Severity (CDEIS) was used to score the endoscopic activity of the disease. Results LI and IBDQ (r = −0.813, p < 0.01) showed a strong negative correlation. IBDQ also demonstrated a strong negative correlation with other MR-EC indices: MaRIA-G, mMaRIA-G and Clermont-G (r = −0.731, r = −0.749, r = −0.726, p = 0.01) respectively. Moreover, there was a moderate correlation between MaRIA-G and CDEIS, also MaRIA-G and LI, respectively (r = 0.698 and r = 0.658, p = 0.01). As well as MaRIA-G and LI, other MR-EC indices mMaRIA-G and Clermont-G showed good correlation with CDEIS (r = 0.580 and r = 0.585, p = 0.01). Conclusion A strong negative correlation between LI and the quality-of-life measured by IBDQ was determined. This correlation was less pronounced when using the MaRIA-G index; therefore, the LI could be more helpful in assessing more global characteristics of the disease, besides the inflammatory activity of the gut.


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