Abstract

Corticosteroids have long been used to treat inflammatory bowel disease. However, cumulative corticosteroid exposure is associated with adverse effects, particularly in growing children. Professional guidelines recommend steroid-sparing strategies. It remains unknown whether corticosteroid use has decreased in children with inflammatory bowel disease. We performed retrospective cohort study using data from 2007 to 2018 from the international multi-center ImproveCareNow Network, a pediatric inflammatory bowel disease quality improvement collaborative. Pediatric patients diagnosed with inflammatory bowel disease were included. Patients with missing diagnosis or corticosteroid use data were excluded. We performed serial cross-sectional analyses of period prevalence and used multivariate regression models. 27,321 patients were included (65% Crohn disease, 28% ulcerative colitis, 7% indeterminate colitis). Corticosteroids were used in 10,206 (37%). Corticosteroid use decreased from 28% (2007) to 12% (2018). Black patients received corticosteroids more commonly than white patients. This disparity improved as corticosteroid use decreased in both groups. Most corticosteroid use occurred <120 days after diagnosis. Corticosteroid or 5-aminosalicylate use <120 days after diagnosis predicted later corticosteroid use. Anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha medication use <120 days after diagnosis was associated with a reduction in corticosteroid use. As corticosteroid use decreased, steroid-sparing therapy use increased and height and weight z scores improved, particularly among children with Crohn disease. Despite improvement across the network, variation in corticosteroid usage remains. Corticosteroid use among pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease in the ImproveCareNow Network has decreased over time. Racial disparities in corticosteroid use were found, but gradually improved.

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