South Asian Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease in the United States Demonstrate More Fistulizing and Perianal Crohn Phenotype

Author:

Jangi Sushrut1,Ruan Alex2,Korzenik Joshua3,de Silva Punyanganie3

Affiliation:

1. Division of Gastroenterology, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California, USA

2. Division of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Division of Gastroenterology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSouth Asians have recently been identified as having a rapidly rising incidence and prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) throughout the world. However, longitudinal phenotypic studies of South Asians living in the United States remain scarce.MethodsWe retrospectively studied 171 South Asian patients with IBD treated at 2 US tertiary centers who presented between 2000 and 2016. South Asian IBD patients were randomly matched in a 1:2 ratio with sex and IBD subtype–matched (ulcerative colitis [UC] vs Crohn disease [CD]) white control patients (n = 342). Demographic and phenotypic characteristics were evaluated and compared between the 2 groups. Odds ratios (OR), logistic regression, and survival analysis were performed using R studio and STATA.Results81 South Asian patients and 162 white patients had CD, and 90 South Asians and 180 white patients had UC. Among the CD group, South Asian patients were diagnosed at a median older age (age 28) than white patients (21 years; P < 0.003). Fistulizing disease (24.1% vs 8.6%; P < 0.002), perianal disease (20.3% vs 2.5%; P < 0.005), and presentation of rectal pain (16.2% vs 2.9%; P < 0.001) were more common among South Asian patients with CD than among white patients. After adjusting for covariates, South Asian patients with CD were less likely to be placed on thiopurines (OR = 0.36; P < 0.007) or to receive more than 1 biologic (OR = 0.42; P < 0.040). South Asian patients with UC were less likely to have proctitis (10% vs 22.2%; P < 0.022) and more likely to have primary sclerosing cholangitis (n = 7 vs n = 2; P < 0.007). South Asian patients born in the United States or those who had migrated before age 5 were younger at the age of IBD diagnosis (age 18.9 vs 32.4; P < 0.0005).ConclusionWe found unique demographic and phenotypic characteristics among South Asian patients, including more penetrating disease in those with CD and less proctitis among those with UC, along with altered medication use patterns. Distinct environmental exposures and a potentially unique genetic profile of South Asian patients may confer this variable phenotypic expression, influencing management of this increasingly at-risk population.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Gastroenterology,Immunology and Allergy

Reference25 articles.

1. Epidemiology and natural history of inflammatory bowel diseases;Cosnes;Gastroenterology.,2011

2. Epidemiology of inflammatory bowel disease: focus on Asia;Ng;Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol.,2014;

3. Inflammatory bowel disease in the Asia-Pacific area: a comparison with developed countries and regional differences;Ahuja;J Dig Dis.,2010

4. Ramakrishnan K, Ahmad F. State of Asian Americans and Pacific Islander series: a multifaceted portrait of a growing population. Center for American Progress. 2014. cdn.americanprogress.org.

5. Epidemiological study of ulcerative proctocolitis in Indian migrants and the indigenous population of Leicestershire;Probert;Gut.,1992

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