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The Development and Initial Findings of A Study of a Prospective Adult Research Cohort with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (SPARC IBD)

Authors :
Andres Yarur
Freddy Caldera
Sirimon O'Charoen
Joshua R. Korzenik
Cecile Norris
Matthew Bohm
Monika Fischer
Sara Sweeney
Alandra Weaver
Uni Wong
Sushila Dalal
Themistocles Dassopoulos
Katerina Wells
David Hudesman
Lilani P. Perera
Shrinivas Bishu
Caren Heller
Richard H. Duerr
Tara Fehlmann
Deepak Parakkal
Raymond K. Cross
James D. Lewis
Manreet Kaur
Matthew A. Ciorba
Sumona Saha
Elizabeth A. Scoville
Laura E. Raffals
Joel Pekow
Scott B. Snapper
Angela Dobes
Meenakshi Bewtra
Source :
Inflamm Bowel Dis
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Background Clinical and molecular subcategories of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are needed to discover mechanisms of disease and predictors of response and disease relapse. We aimed to develop a study of a prospective adult research cohort with IBD (SPARC IBD) including longitudinal clinical and patient-reported data and biosamples. Methods We established a cohort of adults with IBD from a geographically diverse sample of patients across the United States with standardized data and biosample collection methods and sample processing techniques. At enrollment and at time of lower endoscopy, patient-reported outcomes (PRO), clinical data, and endoscopy scoring indices are captured. Patient-reported outcomes are collected quarterly. The quality of clinical data entry after the first year of the study was assessed. Results Through January 2020, 3029 patients were enrolled in SPARC, of whom 66.1% have Crohn’s disease (CD), 32.2% have ulcerative colitis (UC), and 1.7% have IBD-unclassified. Among patients enrolled, 990 underwent colonoscopy. Remission rates were 63.9% in the CD group and 80.6% in the UC group. In the quality study of the cohort, there was 96% agreement on year of diagnosis and 97% agreement on IBD subtype. There was 91% overall agreement describing UC extent as left-sided vs extensive or pancolitis. The overall agreement for CD behavior was 83%. Conclusion The SPARC IBD is an ongoing large prospective cohort with longitudinal standardized collection of clinical data, biosamples, and PROs representing a unique resource aimed to drive discovery of clinical and molecular markers that will meet the needs of precision medicine in IBD.

Details

ISSN :
15364844 and 10780998
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cdddd093b9db869b8411122566803360
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ibd/izab071