The IBD-disk Is a Reliable Tool to Assess the Daily-life Burden of Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

The inflammatory bowel disease [IBD]-disk is a 10-item self-questionnaire that is used to assess IBD-related disability. The aim of the present study was to evaluate this tool in the assessment of IBD daily-life burden. A 1-week cross-sectional study was conducted in 42 centres affiliated in France and Belgium. Patients were asked to complete the IBD-disk [best score: 0, worst score: 100] and a visual analogue scale [VAS] of IBD daily-life burden [best score: 0, worst score: 10]. Analyses included internal consistency, correlation analysis, and diagnostic performance assessment. Among the 2011... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Tadbiri, Sara
Nachury, Maria
Bouhnik, Yoram
Serrero, Melanie
Hébuterne, Xavier
Roblin, Xavier
Kirchgesner, Julien
Bouguen, Guillaume
Franchimont, Denis
Savoye, Guillaume
Buisson, Anthony
Louis, Edouard
Nancey, Stephane
ABitbol, Vered
Reimund, Jean-Marie
DeWit, Olivier
Vuitton, Lucine
Matthieu, Nicolas
Peyrin-Biroulet, Laurent
Gilletta, Cyrielle
Allez, Matthieu
Viennot, Stephanie
Trang-Poisson, Caroline
Dib, Nina
Brixi, Hedia
Boualit, Medina
Plastaras, Laurianne
Boivineau, Lucile
Fumery, Mathurin
Caillo, Ludovic
Laharie, David
Amiot, Aurelien
GETAID-IBD-disk study group
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Schlagwörter: Adult / Belgium / Cross-Sectional Studies / Disability Evaluation / Female / France / Humans / Inflammatory Bowel Diseases / Male / Middle Aged / Crohn’s disease / disability / inflammatory bowel disease / patient-reported outcome / ulcerative colitis
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28928816
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/261288

The inflammatory bowel disease [IBD]-disk is a 10-item self-questionnaire that is used to assess IBD-related disability. The aim of the present study was to evaluate this tool in the assessment of IBD daily-life burden. A 1-week cross-sectional study was conducted in 42 centres affiliated in France and Belgium. Patients were asked to complete the IBD-disk [best score: 0, worst score: 100] and a visual analogue scale [VAS] of IBD daily-life burden [best score: 0, worst score: 10]. Analyses included internal consistency, correlation analysis, and diagnostic performance assessment. Among the 2011 IBD outpatients who responded to the survey [67.8% of the patients had Crohn's disease], 49.9% were in clinical remission. The IBD-disk completion rate was 73.8%. The final analysis was conducted in this population [n = 1455 patients]. The mean IBD-disk score and IBD daily-life burden VAS were 39.0 ± 23.2 and 5.2 ± 2.9, respectively. The IBD-disk score was well correlated with the IBD daily-life burden VAS [r = 0.67; p <0.001]. At an optimal IBD-disk cut-off of 40, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUROC] for high IBD daily-life burden [VAS >5] was 0.81 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.79-0.83; p <0.001). In a large cohort of patients, the IBD-disk score was well correlated with IBD daily-life burden, and it could be used in clinical practice.