Consumer Health Sciences/KantarHealth, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.
Clin Ther. 2010 Feb;32(2):238-45. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2010.02.010.
The purpose of this study was to better understand the characteristics and patterns of treatment of flares of ulcerative colitis (UC) from the patient's perspective. A secondary objective was to determine the predictive value of disease characteristics, particularly disease flares, on current use of biologic therapy.
Study participants were recruited from an Internet panel of self-identified individuals with inflammatory bowel disease (UC or Crohn's disease). The present analysis was limited to individuals who reported having a diagnosis of UC, were aged >or=18 years, resided in the United States, and could speak and write English. Cross-sectional data (demographic characteristics, insurance coverage, incidence of flares, patient experiences, treatment patterns) were collected via a self-reported Internet-based questionnaire during the third quarter of 2008.
A total of 505 individuals with UC completed the survey (72.7% female; 16.6% non-white; 37.2% college graduates; mean [SD] age, 48.6 [2.8] years). The mean time since the diagnosis of UC was 11.9 (10.1) years, and 76.6% of respondents characterized their disease as controlled. Overall, 27.9% of the sample reported >or=1 flare per week, and an additional 25.1% reported >or=1 flare per month. Most disease flares (76.5%) lasted <or=7 days and were classified as moderate in severity (51.9%). Among those reporting >or=1 flare per week, 30.5% classified their overall disease severity as mild, 56.0% as moderate, and 13.5% as severe. The majority of respondents with >or=1 flare per week currently used 5-aminosalicylic acids (5-ASAs) (41.1%) or corticosteroids (49.6%), whereas 19.1% used immunomodulators and 17.0% used biologics. Disease flares were most commonly treated by increasing the dose of the current medication (60.4%) or adding a corticosteroid to the treatment regimen (34.5%).
More than half of these individuals with UC reported experiencing disease flares >or=1 time per week or month. The majority reported using 5-ASAs or corticosteroids as maintenance medications and increasing the dose or adding corticosteroids to control flares in the short term.
本研究旨在从患者角度更好地了解溃疡性结肠炎(UC)发作的特点和治疗模式。次要目的是确定疾病特征,特别是疾病发作,对当前生物治疗使用的预测价值。
研究参与者是从自我认定的炎症性肠病(UC 或克罗恩病)互联网小组中招募的。本分析仅限于报告患有 UC 诊断、年龄≥18 岁、居住在美国且能说英语和写英语的个人。2008 年第三季度,通过基于互联网的自我报告问卷收集横断面数据(人口统计学特征、保险覆盖范围、发作发生率、患者体验、治疗模式)。
共有 505 名 UC 患者完成了调查(72.7%为女性;16.6%为非白人;37.2%为大学毕业生;平均[SD]年龄为 48.6[2.8]岁)。UC 的平均诊断后时间为 11.9(10.1)年,76.6%的受访者将其疾病描述为控制。总体而言,27.9%的样本报告每周发作次数≥1 次,另有 25.1%报告每月发作次数≥1 次。大多数疾病发作(76.5%)持续时间<或=7 天,严重程度为中度(51.9%)。在每周发作次数≥1 次的患者中,30.5%将其整体疾病严重程度评为轻度,56.0%评为中度,13.5%评为重度。每周发作次数≥1 次的大多数受访者目前使用 5-氨基水杨酸(5-ASA)(41.1%)或皮质类固醇(49.6%),而 19.1%使用免疫调节剂,17.0%使用生物制剂。疾病发作最常通过增加当前药物剂量(60.4%)或在治疗方案中添加皮质类固醇(34.5%)进行治疗。
这些 UC 患者中有一半以上报告每周或每月经历疾病发作≥1 次。大多数人报告使用 5-ASA 或皮质类固醇作为维持药物,并在短期内增加剂量或添加皮质类固醇来控制发作。