The Risk of Mild, Moderate, and Severe Infections in IBD patients - A prospective, multicentre observational cohort study (PRIQ).

Ashkan Rezazadeh Ardabili, Dirk Van Esser, Dion Wintjens, Mia Cilissen, Debbie Deben, Zlatan Mujagic, Fritzi Russ, Laurents Stassen, Adriaan Van Bodegraven, Dennis Wong, Bjorn Winkens, Daisy Jonkers, Mariëlle Romberg-Camps, Marieke Pierik
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Abstract

Background: In light of the growing number of treatment options, the benefit-risk balance of IBD drugs is increasingly important in clinical decision-making. Post-marketing surveillance studies are pivotal to assess infection risk, yet mainly focus on severe infections. This study aimed to assess the incidence and risk factors associated with mild, moderate, and severe infections in IBD patients.

Methods: We previously developed and validated a Patient-Reported Infections Questionnaire (PRIQ) which accurately assesses 15 infection categories with a 3-month recall period. The current prospective, multicentre, observational cohort study was performed between June 1, 2020 and July 1, 2021, enrolling consecutive IBD patients using myIBDcoach. Incidence rates (IR) were calculated for all infections and negative binomial regression was utilized to identify risk factors for infections over time.

Results: In total, 629 IBD patients (n=346 CD, n=283 UC, 58.3% female) were included, completing 2397 PRIQs during 573.8 person-years (PY) of follow-up. This resulted in 991 reported infections and an overall IR of 172.7 per 100PY, predominantly characterized by mild (IR 117.5 per 100PY) and moderate (IR 50.9 per 100PY) infections. Risk factors significantly associated with increased overall infection rates included female sex, higher comorbidity burden, smoking, and specific treatments, such as steroids, immunomodulators, anti-TNF agents, and JAK-inhibitors, with steroids doubling infection risk (IRR 2.02).

Conclusion: Mild and moderate infections are common among IBD patients and are particularly associated with both patient characteristics and specific immunosuppressive treatments. These findings emphasize the need for vigilant monitoring, especially for patients at higher infection risk, and allow for more personalized advice on benefit-risk of IBD treatments.

IBD患者轻度、中度和重度感染的风险——一项前瞻性、多中心观察队列研究(PRIQ)。
背景:随着治疗方案的增多,IBD药物的利弊平衡在临床决策中越来越重要。上市后监测研究是评估感染风险的关键,但主要侧重于严重感染。本研究旨在评估IBD患者轻度、中度和重度感染的发生率和相关危险因素。方法:我们先前开发并验证了患者报告感染问卷(PRIQ),该问卷准确评估了15种感染类别,召回期为3个月。目前的前瞻性、多中心、观察性队列研究于2020年6月1日至2021年7月1日进行,使用myIBDcoach招募了连续IBD患者。计算所有感染的发病率(IR),并利用负二项回归确定感染的危险因素。结果:共纳入629例IBD患者(CD 346例,UC 283例,女性58.3%),在573.8人年(PY)的随访期间完成了2397次PRIQs。结果报告感染991例,总体IR为每100PY 172.7例,主要表现为轻度(每100PY 117.5例)和中度(每100PY 50.9例)感染。与总体感染率增加显著相关的危险因素包括女性、较高的合并症负担、吸烟和特异性治疗,如类固醇、免疫调节剂、抗tnf药物和jak抑制剂,其中类固醇使感染风险加倍(IRR 2.02)。结论:轻度和中度感染在IBD患者中很常见,并且与患者特征和特异性免疫抑制治疗特别相关。这些发现强调了警惕监测的必要性,特别是对感染风险较高的患者,并允许对IBD治疗的获益-风险提供更个性化的建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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