Diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease in Asia: the results of a multinational web-based survey in the 2nd Asian Organization for Crohn's and Colitis (AOCC) meeting in Seoul

Article information

Intest Res. 2016;14(3):224-230
Publication date (electronic) : 2016 June 27
doi : https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2016.14.3.224
1Department of Internal Medicine, Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea.
2The First Affiliated Hospital of San Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China.
3Department of Internal Medicine, Chosun University College of Medicine, Gwangju, Korea.
4Department of Internal Medicine, Kyung Hee University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
5Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul Paik Hospital, Inje University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Correspondence to Minhu Chen, Department of Gastroenterology, The First Affiliated Hospital of San Yat-Sen University, 58 Zhongshan II Road, Guangzhou 510080, Guangdong Province, China. Tel: +86-20-87755766, Fax: +86-20-87332916, chenminhu@vip.163.com
Received 2016 April 04; Revised 2016 April 05; Accepted 2016 April 06.

Abstract

Background/Aims

As the number of Asian patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has increased recently, there is a growing need to improve IBD care in this region. This study is aimed at determining how Asian countries are currently dealing with their IBD patients in terms of diagnosis.

Methods

A questionnaire was designed by the organizing committee of Asian Organization for Crohn's and Colitis, for a multinational web-based survey conducted between March 2014 and May 2014.

Results

A total of 353 Asian medical doctors treating IBD patients responded to the survey (114 in China, 88 in Japan, 116 in Korea, and 35 in other Asian countries). Most of the respondents were gastroenterologists working in an academic teaching hospital. While most of the doctors from China, Japan, and Korea use their own national guidelines for IBD diagnosis, those from other Asian countries most commonly adopt the European Crohn's Colitis Organisation's guideline. Japanese doctors seldom adopt the Montreal classification for IBD. The most commonly used activity scoring system for ulcerative colitis is the Mayo score in all countries except China, whereas that for Crohn's disease (CD) is the Crohn's Disease Activity Index. The most available tool for small-bowel evaluation in CD patients differs across countries. Many physicians administer empirical anti-tuberculous medications before the diagnosis of CD.

Conclusions

The results of this survey demonstrate that Asian medical doctors have different diagnostic approaches for IBD. This knowledge would be important in establishing guidelines for improving the care of IBD patients in this region.

INTRODUCTION

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), mainly including UC and CD, are characterized by chronic progressive inflammation of the bowel.1 Although IBD was once considered a rare disorder in Asia compared with Western countries, the incidence and prevalence of IBD in Asia have been recently increasing. The population-based Korean data showed that the mean annual incidence rates of CD and UC increased from 0.05 and 0.34 per 100,000 persons, respectively, in 1986–1990 to 1.34 and 3.08 per 100,000, respectively, in 2001–2005.2

Growing evidence shows that the characteristics of IBD patients differ in epidemiology, phenotype, and genetic susceptibility according to geography.3 This variability of IBD across different countries may induce the variation in the practice pattern of different health-care systems, resulting in considerable divergence in patient outcomes. Therefore, it is timely to pay more attention to the quality improvement of IBD care. However, first, it would be a prerequisite to assess the levels of variation in IBD care among different countries. For this purpose, the IBD study group of the Korean Association for the Study of Intestinal Diseases (KASID) conducted a brief multinational survey for physicians who treat IBD patients in Asian countries, to identify disparities in their daily practice pattern on the occasion of the second annual meeting of the Asian Organization for Crohn's and Colitis (AOCC).

As there is no single gold standard for the diagnosis of IBD, it is a great challenge for clinicians to correctly diagnose these diseases. In the Asian geographic area, it is even more difficult to make accurate diagnosis of IBD because of various infectious diseases that mimic IBD, which may delay the accurate assessment of the clinical characteristics of the disease, leading to failure of early detection and appropriate management. For instance, intestinal tuberculosis (TB), which is relatively prevalent in Asian countries, is very similar to CD in terms of clinical symptoms, disease location, endoscopic appearance of mucosal ulcerations, and pathologic feature. Thus, this study was focused on identifying how Asian physicians approach patients with suspected IBD for the correct diagnosis through a multinational survey in the region.

METHODS

This survey was originally planned by the organizing committee of the AOCC and designed for one of the programs of the second annual meeting of AOCC, which was held in Seoul in June 2014. The questionnaire used in this study was made by members of the IBD study group of KASID. Then, it was revised several times after being reviewed by the staff officer members of KASID and their colleagues from Japan and China. It mainly consisted of four parts, including personal information (9 items), diagnosis of IBD (18 items), treatment of IBD (30 items), and quality of IBD care (36 items). For the diagnosis of IBD, questions were asked about the most commonly used diagnostic guidelines and disease activity assessment systems, whether or not to apply the Montreal classification, and the available tools for small-bowel or perianal disease evaluation for CD. The questionnaires are shown in the Appendix. The survey was conducted through a web-based system between March 2014 and May 2014. The questionnaire was sent to medical doctors caring for IBD patients in Asia via e-mail by representative members for each Asian country in the organizing committee of the AOCC. The results of treatment and quality of IBD care will be reported elsewhere.

RESULTS

1. General Information of Participants

Overall, 353 Asian medical doctors (male, 251 [71.1%]) who treat IBD patients responded to the survey. Most of them were working in academic teaching hospitals (336 [95.2%]). The respondents were from various Asian countries (Korea 116, China 114, Japan 88, Taiwan 17, Hong Kong 8, India 4, Singapore 3, Malaysia 1, the Philippines 1, and Indonesia 1).

2. Diagnostic Guidelines and the Montreal Classification

The national diagnostic guideline for IBD is the most commonly used guideline among respondents from Korea, China, and Japan. Physicians from the other countries apply the European Crohn's Colitis Organisation's guideline most frequently (Fig. 1A). The least number of Japanese physicians classify their IBD patients according to the Montreal classification compared with those from Korea, China, and other Asian countries (Fig. 1B).

Fig. 1

Diagnostic guidelines and the Montreal classification. (A) Proportion of physicians from each country who use IBD diagnostic guidelines. (B) Proportion of physicians from each country who adopt the Montreal classification. ECCO, European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation; AGA, American Gastroenterological Association; BSG, British Society of Gastroenterology.

3. Clinical, Endoscopic, and Radiologic Assessment Tools

For the index or scoring system for the clinical assessment of disease activity of UC, all respondents favor the Mayo score except those from China. The Truelove-Witts index is the most commonly used system for UC activity assessment by Chinese doctors (Fig. 2A). For CD, the CDAI was overwhelmingly chosen by participants from all countries.

Fig. 2

Clinical, endoscopic, and radiologic assessment tools. (A) Clinical severity scoring systems for IBD. (B) Proportion of physicians from each country who use endoscopy to document the activity and extent of disease. (C) Proportion of physicians from each country who use a classification system for the endoscopic severity of UC, such as the Mayo endoscopic subscore. (D) First-line modalities for small-bowel evaluation in suspected CD. HBI, Harvey–Bradshaw Index; PCDAI, Pediatric Crohn's Disease Activity Index; IOIBD, International Organization for the Study of IBD; UCDAI, UC Disease Activity Index; SBFT, small bowel follow-through; USG, ultrasonography; CTE, CT enterography; MRE, magnetic resonance enterography; BAE, balloon-assisted enteroscopy; CE, capsule endoscopy.

Although most physicians (72%–88%) from all countries always use endoscopic examination for evaluating disease activity and extent at the time of diagnosis of UC (Fig. 2B), only 22.8% to 68% of doctors answered that they always adopt an endoscopic severity classification system such as the Mayo endoscopic subscore or UC endoscopic index of severity (UCEIS) (Fig. 2C).

More than 90% of respondents from all countries perform colonoscopy with terminal ileum evaluation to document the activity and extent of disease for suspected CD (Fig. 2B). For small-bowel evaluation, however, there was a wide range of variation among countries. Physicians from Korea and China predominantly perform CT enterography, whereas those from Japan prefer small-bowel follow-through or balloon-assisted enteroscopy. Small-bowel follow-through is also the most frequently favored tool by doctors from the other countries, followed by CT enterography (Fig. 2D). Concerning perianal evaluation, pelvic MRI is the most commonly used instrument in all countries.

4. Evaluations for Excluding Infectious Diseases

For suspected UC, more than half of doctors from China and Japan reported to always perform microbiological culture, whereas only 11.2% and 25.7% of doctors from Korea and the other countries do, respectively (Fig. 3A). Clostridium difficile toxin assay is not conducted adequately in all countries; only 18.9% to 36% of respondents always perform stool C. difficile toxin assay for suspected UC (Fig. 3B).

Fig. 3

Evaluations for excluding infectious diseases. (A) Proportion of physicians from each country who perform microbiological cultures for suspected UC. (B) Proportion of physicians from each country who conduct stool Clostridium difficile toxin assay for suspected UC. (C) Proportion of physicians from each country according to percentage of their CD patients with empirical anti-tuberculous medications before the diagnosis of CD.

Many physicians in Asia administer empirical anti-TB medications before the diagnosis of CD. Approximately 44.7%, 8%, 19.8%, and 17.1% of respondents from China, Japan, Korea, and the other countries, respectively, reported that >20% of their patients with CD had been administered with anti-TB treatments before the diagnosis of CD (Fig. 3C).

DISCUSSION

The results of this survey demonstrate a diverse approach for the diagnosis of IBD among Asian physicians, especially in terms of the kind of guidelines, adoption of the Montreal classification, and modality of small-bowel and perianal evaluation of CD. This study, on the occasion of the second AOCC in 2014, was conducted with 353 physicians, the largest number of participants to date for the survey investigating the pattern of practice of IBD care.

It has been recognized that there are various differences in phenotypes, epidemiologic features, and genetic backgrounds among CD patients from different countries, especially between the Western and Eastern geographic areas.4 Therefore, although well-established guidelines were developed early in Western countries on the basis of numerous evidences, they might not be fit for Asian IBD patients. In an effort to address this issue, individual diagnostic guidelines, criteria, and consensus on IBD have been developed in Asian countries, including China, Korea, and Japan in recent years.5678 The result of the present study—that doctors from China, Korea, and Japan most commonly use their own national guidelines—mirrors the effort of the regional medical society to make significant improvement in the correct diagnosis of IBD in the Asian geographic area. For instance, Asian guidelines have included intestinal Behcet's disease and intestinal TB, as critical differential diseases that are relatively prevalent in these countries compared with their Western counterparts.568

Interestingly, the results of the present survey show that the Montreal classification of IBD is less used by doctors from Japan than those from other Asian countries. In fact, the Vienna or Montreal classification is not stated in the Japanese guidelines,6 whereas the Korean and Chinese guidelines or consensus take this classification into account.28 However, the exact reason for this lower use of the Montreal classification of IBD by Japanese doctors is unclear.

For the system of UC activity index, the Mayo score is dominantly used by most doctors except those from China, who answered to mainly adopt the Truelove-Witts score. The simplicity of the Truelove-Witts score might be one of the explanations for the preference of Chinese doctors to this scoring system, as this system does not need endoscopy for the calculation of activity.9 Meanwhile, the Mayo score requires the endoscopic evaluation of the mucosa for the calculation of activity.10 For CD, the CDAI is overwhelmingly favored by doctors from all countries. Considering the complexity and impracticability of CDAI,11 however, it remains to be seen how often physicians actually use CDAI in real clinical practice.

No endoscopic score system for UC has been widely used in daily routine practice. Although the Mayo endoscopic subscore has been extensively used in many trials,10 it has not been properly validated.12 Only the UCEIS and the UC colonoscopic index of severity (UCCIS) were recently validated.1314 However, these new instruments are still not ready for use and not reliable as the definition of remission is lacking.1415 This issue is well reflected by the result that respondents seldom use an endoscopic scoring system such as the Mayo score or UCEIS, whereas they answered to always perform an endoscopic examination for UC diagnosis, indicating the impracticability of the endoscopic scoring system. It is urgent to develop a novel clinical endoscopic score system that is well validated and simple to use.

It is notable that evaluation for C. difficile infection is not performed adequately by doctors from Asian countries; approximately only 30% of respondents perform C. difficile toxin assay for suspected UC (Fig. 3B). Recent Western epidemiologic studies have demonstrated that patients with IBD are greatly susceptible to C. difficile infection compared with the general population, prompting to recommend routine stool screening for C. difficile toxin in IBD patients.1617 However, this trend seems to be not evident in Asian IBD patients, as there have been no data on this relation. It is not clear whether this lack of relation between C. difficile infection and IBD in Asia might be attributed to the lower prevalence of IBD compared with Western countries.

We found a significant range of variation in the evaluation of the small bowel for CD among countries. Korean and Chinese physicians favored CT enterography, whereas Japanese and those from other countries chose small-bowel follow-through as the first-line tool for assessing small-bowel lesions in CD patients. Notably, a considerable proportion of Japanese doctors (28.4%) use balloon-assisted enteroscopy, whereas no physicians in Korea prefer this modality (Fig. 2D). This difference might result from the various medical insurance systems or the level of accessibility to radiologic equipment in each country. For instance, balloon-assisted enterography is not reimbursed by the Korean national medical insurance, leading to a low preference for this tool among physicians.

One of the distinguished findings of the present study is the high rate of empirical anti-TB treatment before CD diagnosis in Asia, reflecting the difficulties in discriminating these two diseases. Although there have been several studies on the typical features of intestinal TB for differentiating it from CD,181920212223 correct diagnosis is still challenging for physicians in the Asian geographic area. This result indicates the urgent need for a coordinated and organized effort to develop effective tools or markers to distinguish these two diseases in the region.

In conclusion, the results of the present survey demonstrate that Asian doctors apply different approaches to their IBD patients, reflecting a unique situation in this region compared with Western countries. It would be important to establish Asian guidelines for improved care of IBD patients.

Notes

Financial support: None.

Conflict of interest: None.

Appendices

Appendix

Questionnaires regarding the diagnosis of IBD

Practice pattern for the Diagnosis of Ulcerative Colitis

* Always (90-100%), Usually (70-90%), Sometimes (30-70%), Rarely (10-30%), Never (0-10%)

1. What diagnostic guidelines for UC do you use most commonly in your practice?

  • 1) ECCO consensus guideline (2012)

  • 2) Guidelines of the American College of Gastroenterology (2010)

  • 3) BSG (British Society of Gastroenterology) guidelines (2011)

  • 4) Asia-Pacific consensus (2006)

  • 5) National guidelines of your country (if any)

  • 6) I do not use guidelines for UC diagnosis

2. Do you classify your UC patients according to the Montreal classification?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

3. What index/scoring system do you use most commonly in your practice for assessing disease activity?

  • 1) (Modified) Truelove-Witts' severity index

  • 2) Mayo score

  • 3) Seo index

  • 4) St. Mark's index

  • 5) Pediatric UCDAI

  • 6) Others (please specify, )

  • 7) I do not use a scoring system

4. Do you perform endoscopic examination including sigmoidoscopy to document activity and extent of the disease at the time of diagnosis of UC?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

5. Do you use a classification system of the endoscopic severity of your UC patients? (e.g. Mayo score)

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

6. How often do you perform biopsies for each segment explored, including the rectum, to document activity and extent of the disease?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

7. How often do you perform serologic tests for ANCA and/or ASCA for suspected UC?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

8. How often do you perform microbiological culture for suspected UC?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

9. How often do you perform Clostridium difficile toxin assay for suspected UC?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

Practice pattern for the Diagnosis of Crohn's

1. What guidelines for diagnosis of CD do you use most commonly in your practice?

  • 1) ECCO guideline

  • 2) Guidelines of the American College of Gastroenterology

  • 3) Guidelines of the British Society of Gastroenterology

  • 4) Asia-Pacific consensus

  • 5) National guidelines of your country (if any)

  • 6) I do not use guidelines for CD diagnosis.

2. Do you classify your CD patients according to the Montreal classification?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

3. What index/scoring system do you use most commonly in your practice for assessing disease activity at the diagnosis or during monitoring?

  • 1) Crohn's disease activity index

  • 2) Harvey Bradshaw Index

  • 3) Pediatric CDAI

  • 4) International Organization for the Study of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IOIBD) score

  • 5) Others (please specify, )

  • 6) I do not use a scoring system.

4. How often do you perform colonoscopy (with terminal ileum evaluation) to document activity and extent of the disease for suspected CD?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

5. What kind of small bowel imaging modality do you use most commonly in your practice for CD?

  • 1) Small bowel follow-through or enteroclysis

  • 2) Abdominal ultrasonography

  • 3) Conventional CT

  • 4) CT enterography

  • 5) MR enterography

  • 6) Balloon-assisted enteroscopy

  • 7) Capsule endoscopy

  • 8) I do not perform small bowel imaging studies.

6. How often do you perform EGD to evaluate the upper gastrointestinal tract after the diagnosis of CD?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

7. Which of the following procedures do you perform most commonly in your practice to evaluate perianal disease in suspected cases?

  • 1) Anorectal ultrasonography (including EUS)

  • 2) Pelvic CT

  • 3) Pelvic MRI

  • 4) Consult surgeon

  • 5) I do not perform any of these procedures

8. How often do you perform serologic tests for ASCA and/or ANCA for suspected CD?

  • 1) Always

  • 2) Usually

  • 3) Sometimes

  • 4) Rarely

  • 5) Never

9. What percentage of your CD patients were administered empiric anti-tuberculous medications before the diagnosis of CD?

  • 1) less than 20%

  • 2) 20 – 40%

  • 3) 40 – 60%

  • 4) more than 60%

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Article information Continued

Fig. 1

Diagnostic guidelines and the Montreal classification. (A) Proportion of physicians from each country who use IBD diagnostic guidelines. (B) Proportion of physicians from each country who adopt the Montreal classification. ECCO, European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation; AGA, American Gastroenterological Association; BSG, British Society of Gastroenterology.

Fig. 2

Clinical, endoscopic, and radiologic assessment tools. (A) Clinical severity scoring systems for IBD. (B) Proportion of physicians from each country who use endoscopy to document the activity and extent of disease. (C) Proportion of physicians from each country who use a classification system for the endoscopic severity of UC, such as the Mayo endoscopic subscore. (D) First-line modalities for small-bowel evaluation in suspected CD. HBI, Harvey–Bradshaw Index; PCDAI, Pediatric Crohn's Disease Activity Index; IOIBD, International Organization for the Study of IBD; UCDAI, UC Disease Activity Index; SBFT, small bowel follow-through; USG, ultrasonography; CTE, CT enterography; MRE, magnetic resonance enterography; BAE, balloon-assisted enteroscopy; CE, capsule endoscopy.

Fig. 3

Evaluations for excluding infectious diseases. (A) Proportion of physicians from each country who perform microbiological cultures for suspected UC. (B) Proportion of physicians from each country who conduct stool Clostridium difficile toxin assay for suspected UC. (C) Proportion of physicians from each country according to percentage of their CD patients with empirical anti-tuberculous medications before the diagnosis of CD.