The Impact of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Canada 2018: Children and Adolescents with IBD.
Matthew W CarrollM Ellen KuenzigDavid R MackAnthony R OtleyAnne M GriffithsGilaad G KaplanCharles N BernsteinAlain BittonSanjay K MurthyGeoffrey C NguyenKate LeeJane Cooke-LauderEric I BenchimolPublished in: Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology (2018)
We have limited knowledge on what causes IBD in children and why rates are rising most rapidly in young children. We must better understand the interaction between genes, the environment, the immune system and the microbiome in order to better prevent and treat the disease.Treatment for infants with IBD-like illnesses and single-gene mutations is limited. Future research should work towards identifying these children and learning how best to treat them.There are few clinical trials for biologics in children, and most exclude very young children. Support for such trials is important to understand whether the treatments work, how they should optimally be given and whether they are safe for young children with IBD.Considering the effectiveness of dietary therapies for children with Crohn's disease (exclusive enteral nutrition), we should work to understand how diet affects intestinal inflammation and the microbiome in order to better use dietary therapies to treat IBD.Health services researchers, health care providers and policy-makers should work together to understand why variation in the access to treatment and medical care of children with IBD exists. We must work together to improve the quality of care provided to these children and ensure they have the highest quality of care.Psychosocial implications of IBD in children and their families are of importance to long-term and overall well-being. Children with a chronic, incurable disease are at risk for mental illness associated with their disease. We should design interventions to improve the psychosocial status, mental health and quality of life of children with IBD and their families.While nonlive immunizations are safe for children with IBD, we must understand how to improve their effectiveness in children who are immunosuppressed. While the peak onset of IBD occurs in the second or third decades of life, the frequency of new diagnoses in younger children is rising rapidly. In Canada, the fastest growing group of newly diagnosed people with IBD are children aged under 5 years (termed 'very early onset [VEO] IBD). These young children have not been included in clinical trials of new medications, resulting in a lack of scientific evidence of safety and effectiveness of treatments in this group, and clinical experience has shown that they do not respond to usual medications used for the majority of children with IBD. Providing children with IBD with high-quality care and social support also poses other challenges to care providers, families and the health system. This section will focus on the unique challenges facing Canadian children with IBD. A complete overview of the objectives, working committees and methodology of creating the report can be found in the supplemental file, Technical Document.
Keyphrases
- young adults
- healthcare
- mental health
- clinical trial
- early onset
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- newly diagnosed
- palliative care
- physical activity
- mental illness
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- ulcerative colitis
- transcription factor
- depressive symptoms
- health insurance
- study protocol
- smoking cessation
- phase iii
- replacement therapy