Frailty in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
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PROJECT SUMMARY AND ABSTRACT Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), comprised of Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), are chronic inflammatory conditions of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract affecting over 3 million Americans. IBD is traditionally a disease of the young, but IBD has a bimodal incidence with the second peak occurring in the 7th decade of life. The aging population, decreasing fatality and the rise in incidence and prevalence have led to a prominent increase in older adults with IBD: 26% of Americans with IBD are ≥65 years. IBD patients have geriatric syndromes at earlier ages. Yet the impact of aging-related constructs, such as frailty, on IBD activity and complications are unknown. In retrospective studies, a frailty-related diagnosis code was more prevalent in IBD patients, associated with nearly twice the odds of infections after immunosuppression and nearly triple the odds of mortality. Older adults with IBD have poorer disease and treatment related outcomes compared with younger adults. Frailty constructs have successfully been used to risk stratify patients with cancers and end stage-liver disease. Determining the relationship of frailty with IBD activity and complications is critical to comprehensively assess older adults and risk stratify older patients receiving immunosuppression for IBD treatment. The goal of this proposal is to use the Fried frailty phenotype to characterize frailty in adults ≥60 years with IBD. The aims are to quantify the association between frailty and IBD activity and assess the longitudinal impact of frailty on IBD and treatment-related complications. We have successfully undertaken a pilot study enrolling patients ≥60 years with a confirmed diagnosis of IBD in a cohort designed to study frailty. In this cohort, we will collect demographics, IBD-related information, medications, patient reported outcomes (PROs) as well as disease- specific activity indices. We will assess fatigue, unintentional weight loss and physical function using grip strength, gait speed and a PRO as well administer the vulnerable elders scale (VES). We will repeat these measures 6 and 12 months after a baseline evaluation for longitudinal follow-up. This proposal will be the first prospective study of frailty in older adults with IBD. Positioning a frailty assessment within routine clinical care of IBD patients is pioneering. Characterizing those who are physiologically more fit to withstand immunosuppressive therapies may expand access for effective steroid-sparing, therapies to older adults. For career development, this proposal will facilitate my research in aging-related processes in IBD patients and provide the requisite training to apply principles of geriatrics to IBD. Furthermore, these aims will generate the data needed for a competitive NIA K application to develop a multi-center cohort of older adults with IBD to better understand frailty mechanisms and the utility of a tailored frailty instrument to risk stratify older adults requiring immunosuppression for the treatment of IBD. This path will provide the foundation needed to develop a leading research program with the overarching goal of improving the care of older adults with IBD.