4.6 Article

Patient-reported Outcomes and Disability Are Associated with Histological Disease Activity in Patients with Ulcerative Colitis: Results from the APOLLO Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages 1046-1054

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjad015

Keywords

Ulcerative colitis; PRO; patient-reported outcomes disability; endpoint; histo-endoscopic remission

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Treating beyond endoscopic remission, aiming for histological remission, is an emerging target in UC. Patient-reported outcome measurements (PROMs) become increasingly important, but their association with histology is unclear.
Background and Aims Treating beyond endoscopic remission, aiming for histological remission, is an emerging target in ulcerative colitis [UC]. Patient-reported outcome measurements [PROMs] become increasingly important, but their association with histology is unclear. Methods Multiple PROMs were prospectively collected in UC patients undergoing colonoscopy. Mayo endoscopic sub-score [MES] and ulcerative colitis endoscopic index of severity [UCEIS] were determined, as well as the Nancy histological index [NHI] of the most affected area. Endoscopic remission was defined as MES and UCEIS 0, histological remission as NHI 0, and histo-endoscopic mucosal remission [HEMR] as a combination of both. Results A total of 109 assessments were collected in 80 patients with endoscopic and HEMR remission rates of 24.8% and 16.5%, respectively. Patients with HEMR had a significantly lower overall inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] disability [p <0.001] and disease activity score [p <0.001] as compared with patients without. In line, NHI correlated with the overall IBD-disk [r = 0.36, p <0.001] and simple clinical colitis activity index [SCCAI] score [r = 0.44, p <0.001]. Many individual components of both differed significantly between patients with and without HEMR. Although the overall accuracy of the IBD-disk [0.78] or SCCAI score [0.83] for HEMR is lower [p <0.005] than the MES or UCEIS [0.95], a cumulative IBD-disk score >35.5 and an SSCAI score >3.5 have a high negative predictive value [98.6% and 100.0%, respectively] to exclude HEMR. Conclusion Histo-endoscopic inactive disease is associated with reduced IBD disability, but not with complete absence thereof. PROMs for disability and clinical disease activity cannot fully replace histo-endoscopic findings, and should be considered complementary in patient-centred endpoint discussions. Nevertheless, PROMs have a high negative predictive value to rule out HEMR.

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