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January 05, 2022
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Steroids associated with shortened life expectancy in older adult IBD

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Mesalamine correlated with the longest life expectancy among older adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease, while steroid use correlated with the shortest life expectancy, according to research published in BMC Gastroenterology.

Perspective from Jessica Philpott, MD, PhD

“Life expectancy reframes mortality in a way that is more accessible to patients: the number of years they can expect to live rather than the relative risk of death. We previously demonstrated that life expectancy among people with IBD has increased since the introduction of biologic therapy; this study takes these findings one step further focusing on the association between IBD medications and life expectancy in seniors with IBD,” M. Ellen Kuenzig, PhD, senior research associate at SickKids Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, told Healio. “This is particularly important since IBD is becoming increasingly common among seniors and managing seniors is more complex than managing IBD in younger individuals due to age-related comorbidities such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes as well as many IBD-related medications being linked to higher rates of infection and malignancy.”

Life expectancy among patients at age 65 treated for IBD

In a retrospective cohort study, researchers compared the life expectancy of 28,260 patients with IBD aged 65 years or older who received either immunomodulator monotherapy, biologic monotherapy, combination therapy, mesalamine, systemic steroids or no therapy. Stratified by sex, they generated mortality rates using a period life table approach.

According to study results, life expectancy at 65 years was longest among patients taking mesalamine and shortest among patients taking steroids regardless of sex (women: 22.1 years; 95% CI, 21.8-22.5 vs. 11.7 years; 95% CI, 11-12.4; men: 19.6 years; 95% CI, 19.3-20 vs. 10.3 years; 95% CI, 9.7-10.8). While Kuenzig and colleagues noted no significant difference in life expectancy among patients who received either immunomodulatory monotherapy or biologic monotherapy, immunomodulator monotherapy correlated with a decreased life expectancy compared with combination therapy by 5.1 years (95% CI, 2.3-7.8) for women and 2.8 years (95% CI, 0.1-5.5) for men.

They observed the lowest age-standardized mortality rate among women who received combination therapy with a biologic and immunomodulator (20.4 deaths/1,000 person-years [PY]; 95% CI, 11.3-34) followed by women who received mesalamine (33.1 deaths/1,000 PY; 95% CI, 30.8-35.5) and for men who received mesalamine (35.8 deaths/1,000 PY; 95% CI, 33.4-38.3) followed by men in the no-therapy group (45.2 deaths/1,000 PY; 95% CI, 43.3-47.2) and combination therapy (45.4 deaths/1,000 PY; 95% CI, 21.8-83.5). For both patient groups, the highest mortality rates occurred among those who received systemic steroids (women: 100.4 deaths/1,000 PY; 95% CI, 92.3-109; men: 125 deaths/1,000 PY; 95% CI, 114.8-136).

“Life expectancy in seniors with IBD varies across medication groups with patients on mesalamine having the longest life expectancy and patients on steroids having the shortest life expectancy. The similarities in the life expectancy observed among people on immunomodulators and biologics, both likely prescribed to those with moderate to severe disease, and patients not on any therapy, suggest that well-controlled disease is an important predictor of life expectancy in seniors with IBD and should be balanced with the potential complications of therapy when deciding on a disease-management strategy,” Kuenzig said. “Future research should focus on the role factors [IBD severity, phenotype or individual patient comorbidities] play and the interaction between them in influencing life expectancy.”

 

Editor’s note: This story was updated Jan. 6, 2022, to include original comment from a study author as well as to better reflect key findings in the headline.