Abstract

Objective: To investigate the clinical data of children with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) retrospectively, including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) and identify the clinical characteristics and trends of change. Method: Clinical data of hospitalized patients diagnosed as IBD in Beijing Children's Hospital from January 2000 to December 2014 were collected and retrospectively analyzed. Patients were divided into six groups based on type of disease and year of admission: Group A1(CD, 2000-2004) included 12 patients, Group B1(CD, 2005-2009) included 11, Group C1(CD, 2010-2014) included 51; Group A2(UC, 2000-2004) included 17, Group B2(UC, 2005-2009) included 25, Group C2(UC, 2010-2014) included 68. Result: A total of 184 IBD patients were included in the study, 74 had CD and 110 had UC. The hospitalization constituent ratio of CD increased from 0.6/10 000 in Year 2000 to 2.9/10 000 in Year 2014. The hospitalization constituent ratio of UC increased from 0.5/10 000 in Year 2001 to 3.9/10 000 in Year 2014. The hospitalization constituent ratios of CD and UC both increased gradually(P<0.05). Up to 61.4%(113/184) of IBD patients belong to early onset IBD, furthermore the very early onset IBD and infantile IBD accounted for 41.8%(77/184) and 26.6%(49/184) respectively. For CD, ileocolonic type(47.3%, 35/74) and non-structuring, non-penetrating type (67.6%, 50/74) were more common. Perianal disease occured in 31.1%(23/74) of CD patients; 81.1%(60/74) of CD patients had moderate/severe activity. For UC, pancolitis type(59.1%, 65/110) was more common. There were no significant changes for location of pathological change, disease behavior, activity degree of CD, extent of UC lesion and incidence of surgery, intestinal perforation and hemorrhage of gastrointestinal tract for IBD in the past 15 years(P>0.05). Severe UC(S3) was more common in Group A2(64.7%, 11/17), but moderate UC(S2) was more common in Group C2(48.5%, 33/68), the difference was statistically significant (P=0.001 7). Conclusion: During the past 15 years, the hospitalization constituent ratio for IBD in our hospital showed a growing trend. The ratio of infantile IBD and very early onset IBD was high. For CD, perianal disease was commonly seen and most patients had moderate/severe activity. The surgery rate and incidence of intestinal obstruction and perforation were higher in the CD patients than UC patients. For UC, the lesions were more extensively combined with higher disease activity.

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