Abstract INTRODUCTION Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammatory condition that may result in malnutrition and alteration of body composition, such as the development of sarcopenia. Sarcopenia is a known component of frailty, which is a driver of poor health outcomes and a significant independent predictor of mortality in patients with IBD. The purpose of this study was to determine whether grip strength, as a predictor of sarcopenia and frailty, is associated with clinical symptoms, endoscopic disease activity and disease-related disability in patients with IBD. METHODS This is a prospective cohort study performed at a single tertiary care center. Outpatient adults aged 18 to 89-years-old with a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis (UC) or Crohn’s disease (CD), were consented and enrolled at the time of an outpatient colonoscopy. Study participants were asked to complete two paper surveys addressing clinical symptoms and IBD Disability Index. Grip strength measurements were obtained using a Jamar dynamometer and adjusted for age and sex by Z-score calculation. RESULTS There was a total of 74 patients, with a mean age of 47.06 years, 51.4% male and 48.6% female with a diagnosis of either UC (38%) or CD (62%). The mean disease duration was 15.7 years (0.5-50.7). Mean hand grip Z-score amongst all patients was lower in patients not in clinical remission compared to those in clinical remission (–0.160 vs 0.480, p = 0.025), though in subgroup analysis based on diagnosis, statical significance only maintained in the CD, but not the UC group (-0.230 vs 0.610, p=0.044; 0.020 vs 0.340, p=0.544 respectively). Mean hand grip Z-score was not associated with IBD Disability Index (–0.070 vs 0.250, p= 0.669) or endoscopic disease activity (UC 0.210 vs 0.070, p=0.513; CD –0.108 vs 0.274, p=0.638). CONCLUSION Low hand grip strength is associated with clinical disease activity in patients with CD but not UC. Our study does not suggest hand grip strength to be associated with IBD-related disability or endoscopic disease activity in either patients with UC or CD. Data on clinical outcomes at 6-months will be collected. DISCUSSION From the findings in our study, hand grip measurements alone may not be the best predictor of disease activity or related disability. There is a lack of validated diagnostic criteria for sarcopenia and frailty in the IBD population and additional diagnostic modalities may be required. While our study suggests that hand grip may be correlated with clinical disease activity in patients with CD, additional studies with a large population size and wider representation of disease severity, such as including hospitalized IBD populations, are needed to further validate these findings.
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