Background or PurposeDespite interest in patient-reported outcome measures to track progression in Crohn’s disease, frameworks to apply these questionnaires in the preoperative setting are lacking. Using the short inflammatory bowel disease questionnaire (sIBDQ), this study aimed to describe interpretable quality of life thresholds and examine potential associations with future bowel resection in Crohn’s disease. MethodsAdult Crohn’s disease patients completing an sIBDQ at a clinic visit between 2020-2022 were eligible. A stoplight framework was adopted for sIBDQ scores, including a ‘Resection Red zone’ suggesting poor quality of life that may benefit from discussions about surgery as well as a ‘Nonoperative Green’ zone. Thresholds were identified with both anchor- and distribution-based methods using receiver operating characteristic curve analysis and subgroup percentile scores, respectively. To quantify associations between sIBDQ scores and subsequent bowel resection, multivariable logistic regression models were fit with covariates of age, sex, body mass index, medications, disease pattern and location, resection history, and the Harvey Bradshaw Index. Incremental discriminatory value of the sIBDQ beyond clinical factors was assessed through area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC) with an internal validation through bootstrap resampling. ResultsOf 2003 included patients, 102 underwent Crohn’s-related bowel resection. The sIBDQ Nonoperative Green zone threshold ranged from 61 to 64 and the Resection Red zone from 36 to 38. When adjusting for clinical covariates, a worse sIBDQ score was associated with greater odds of subsequent 90-day bowel resection when considered as a one-point (OR [95% CI], 1.05 [1.03-1.07]) or five-point change (OR [95% CI], 1.25 [1.13-1.40]). Inclusion of the sIBDQ modestly improved discriminative performance (AUC [95% CI] 0.85 [0.85 – 0.86]) relative to models that included only demographics (0.57 [0.57 – 0.58]) or demographics with clinical covariates (0.83 [0.83 – 0.84]). Discussion or ConclusionIn the decision-making process for bowel resection, disease-specific patient-reported outcome measures may be useful to identify Crohn’s disease patients with poor quality of life and promote shared understanding of personalized burden.