Abstract
The objective of the study was to assess whether the incidences of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are increased in patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) compared to the general population.
A population-based retrospective cohort study was conducted using the administrative health databases of Québec, Canada. Incidences of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis among patients with asthma and COPD were assessed for the 2001–2006 period.
In total, 136 178 subjects with asthma and 143 904 subjects with COPD were identified. The average incidence of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis was 23.1 and 8.8 per 100 000 person-years among asthmatic patients; in the COPD cohort there were 26.2 Crohn’s disease cases and 17 ulcerative colitis cases per 100 000 person-years. The incidence of Crohn’s disease in asthma and COPD patients was 27% and 55% higher than in the general population of Québec; the incidence of ulcerative colitis was 30% higher among COPD patients compared to the general population.
Incidence of inflammatory bowel disease was significantly increased in asthma and COPD patients compared to the general population of Québec. Incidence rates were particularly high in patients with COPD. Awareness of an association between airway diseases and inflammatory bowel disease in older age groups may play an important role in earlier detection of bowel disease and in the therapeutic management of such patients.
Abstract
Patients with airway diseases have a higher incidence of inflammatory bowel disease than the general population http://ow.ly/D6dXl
Introduction
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and airway diseases may be associated through common inflammatory pathways, genetic and environmental factors [1–4]. The intestinal and respiratory epithelia share the same embryological origin, have a similar anatomic structure and serve as organ barriers between the body and the environment. Immunological dysfunctions triggered by environmental factors are a common element in the pathogenesis of both IBD and airway diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Furthermore, pulmonary involvement, in its multiple forms [5], is one of the extra-intestinal manifestations of IBD, while an increased intestinal permeability was described in asthmatic patients [6].
Epidemiological studies have shown that the prevalence of IBD was significantly increased among patients with airway diseases compared to prevalence in the general population [2, 7]. Childhood asthma was also associated with increased risk of developing Crohn’s disease [8]. However, the incidence of IBD among patients with airway diseases has never been assessed. Québec is the province with the second highest incidence of Crohn’s disease in Canada [9, 10], with a prevalence of asthma and COPD above the Canadian average [11], and with the highest mortality rate due to COPD of all Canadian provinces [12]. We sought to assess whether the incidences of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are increased in patients with airway diseases compared to the general population of Québec, Canada.
Methods
Data source
The administrative health databases of the Régie de l’assurance maladie du Québec (RAMQ) capture the physician visits, procedures, hospitalisations, patient demographics and pharmacy claims under the provincial public drug plan for all residents. The provincial pharmacy claims databases cover approximately 40% of Québec residents: all residents aged 65 years and older, those who receive social assistance, and those who do not have private drug insurance through their employer [13]. Data regarding type of drugs, quantity, date dispensed and duration, are missing or out of range in less than 0.4% of records [14]. Ethics approval for this study was granted by the research ethics committee of the Sir Mortimer B. Davis Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Study design and case identification
In this population-based retrospective cohort study, the source population consisted of all subjects who, between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2007, were dispensed at least one of several respiratory medications: any form of β-agonist, theophylline, ipratropium bromide, tiotropium, sodium cromoglycate, nedocromil, ketotifen, leukotriene antagonists (montelukast and zafirlukast) or inhaled corticosteroids (ICS). A base population of airway disease patients was identified from the source population as all subjects with three or more prescriptions for respiratory medication in any 1-year period and on at least two different occasions. Several studies addressing the risk of fractures, cataracts, glaucoma, tuberculosis and pneumonia among patients with airway disease have successfully employed the RAMQ pharmacy claims databases and the above mentioned criteria to identify patients with chronic airway disease [15–19].
From the base airway disease population we selected two mutually exclusive cohorts of asthma and COPD patients. The asthma cohort included all subjects from the base population aged 40 years or less at cohort entry (third prescription for respiratory medication). The COPD cohort included all subjects from the base population aged 41 years or older at cohort entry (third prescription for respiratory medication) who were never dispensed leukotriene antagonists (montelukast, zafirlukast), sodium cromoglycate, nedocromil or ketotifen and who never had a diagnostic code of asthma recorded in the database. The age of 40 years was used as cut-off point in other claims database studies related to COPD [20, 21].
Among patients with asthma and COPD we subsequently identified IBD cases using a case definition requiring at least four physician billings within a 2-year time period or one hospitalisation with a primary diagnosis of IBD (either Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis). The IBD case definition was developed in Alberta, Canada, and was validated through chart review and linkage with endoscopy records [22]. The diagnosis codes used were 555.x and K50.xx for Crohn’s disease and 556.x and K51.xx for ulcerative colitis, according to the ninth and 10th revisions of the International Classification of Diseases. The scoring system used to further classify IBD cases into Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis or IBD not classified was described elsewhere [10].
Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis incidence
Incident cases were defined as the individuals in the asthma and COPD cohort who met the case definition for Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis during 2001–2006 and who had been free of IBD for at least 2 years prior to the beginning of the 2-year case-defining period. The IBD-free period was not required for children 2 years of age or younger at diagnosis. We computed Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis incidence in patients with asthma and COPD during 2001–2006 because information regarding incidence in the general population was also available from our previous work [10] for that period, and IBD cases were identified using the same methodology. Data regarding hospitalisations in 2007 were incomplete; therefore, incidence in 2007 was not assessed.
All cases were considered as diagnosed on the date they met the case definition, whether that occurred at the time of a hospitalisation with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis as the primary diagnosis or at the fourth physician billing with a Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis diagnostic code.
Statistical analysis
The age- and sex-standardised incidence rates were calculated using the direct method and the 2001 Census population for the Québec province [23]. Data analysis was performed using the SAS/STAT software, version 9.3 of the SAS System for Windows, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA. All graphical elements were produced using the R software, version 3.0.1, R Foundation for statistical computing, Vienna, Austria.
Results
From the base population, 136 178 subjects were selected into the asthma cohort and 143 904 into the COPD cohort. The characteristics of subjects with asthma and COPD who developed IBD during 2001–2006 are presented in table 1.
The mean±sd age at diagnosis in the asthma cohort was 26±11 years for Crohn’s disease and 31±10 years for ulcerative colitis; in the COPD cohort the mean±sd age at diagnosis was 69±11 years for Crohn’s disease and 72±11 years for ulcerative colitis. The mean±sd duration of follow-up before IBD diagnosis was 6.5±4 years for the asthma cohort and 5.2±3.6 years for the COPD cohort.
Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis incidence
The age-specific incidence rates of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis among patients with asthma and COPD are plotted in figure 1. In the asthma cohort the highest incidence for Crohn’s disease, 34.3 cases per 100 000 person-years, occurred in the 20–29-year-old age group; for ulcerative colitis, the highest incidence was 14.9 cases per 100 000 person-years, in the 30–39-year-old group. In the COPD cohort the highest incidence of Crohn’s disease, 35.5 cases per 100 000 person-years, occurred in the 50–59-year-old age group; for ulcerative colitis, the highest incidence was 24.9 cases per 100 000 person-years, in the 60–69-year-old group. The average Crohn’s disease incidence rate for the 2001–2006 period was 23.07 cases per 100 000 person-years in the asthma cohort and 26.17 cases per 100 000 person-years in the COPD cohort. The average ulcerative colitis incidence was 8.8 cases per 100 000 person-years in the asthma cohort and 17.04 cases per 100 000 person-years in the COPD cohort, as shown in table 2.
The rate ratios showed that the incidence of Crohn’s disease was higher than in the general population of Québec by 27% and 55% for asthma and COPD patients, respectively. The incidence of ulcerative colitis was 30% higher in COPD patients than in the general population. For Crohn’s disease, the age-specific incidence in patients with asthma and COPD was significantly higher than in the general population for all age groups, with the exception of subjects aged 10–19 and over 70 years old. For ulcerative colitis we found a significantly higher incidence in asthma subjects aged 30–39 and COPD subjects aged 40–49 and 60–69 years compared to ulcerative colitis incidence for the same age groups in the general population.
The overall female/male ratio for Crohn’s disease was 1.46 (95% CI 1.39–1.53) in the asthma cohort and 2.15 (95% CI 2.02–2.28) in the COPD cohort. For ulcerative colitis there was no significant difference between incidence rates in females and males in the asthma cohort but there were significantly more males in the COPD cohort, as figures 2 and 3 illustrate.
Discussion
In this administrative health database study we found that the incidences of both Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis in patients with asthma and COPD were significantly higher compared to the general population of Québec during 2001–2006. Several European studies have reported similar findings in terms of IBD prevalence and the risk of developing IBD [2, 7, 8]. Indeed, a retrospective analysis of outpatients with airway diseases in UK found up to a four-fold increase in IBD prevalence compared to the published local prevalence [7]. A study using the Swedish disease registries showed that the risk of developing IBD in patients with COPD was approximately double that in the controls without COPD, and that there was also a significant increase in the risk of IBD among first-degree relatives of COPD patients [2]. The underlying genetic, physiological and immune mechanisms that may explain the association between IBD and airway diseases were reviewed by Keely et al. [24]. Regions of genetic linkage identified through genome-wide analyses associated with asthma, Crohn’s disease and other autoimmune diseases were shown to overlap [25]. An impairment of intestinal permeability, which may play an important role in susceptibility to IBD [26], was described in subjects with both asthma [8] and COPD [27], further substantiating the association between these chronic inflammatory conditions.
In our study, the highest incidence rate ratio was observed in children up to 10 years old for the asthma cohort and in adults aged 50–59 years old for the COPD cohort, where the incidence of Crohn’s disease was more than double that in the general population. The findings of Virta et al. [8] were also suggestive of an association between childhood asthma and Crohn’s disease, while two other studies failed to find a significant association [28, 29].
Our results are suggestive of an association between COPD and incident IBD, as the incidence of both Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis in elderly COPD patients was significantly higher than in the general population. The ulcerative colitis incidence reached 25 cases per 100 000 person-years in the 60–69 years age group, 84% higher than in the general population.
We found that there was an overall predominance of female incident cases of Crohn’s disease, and that the incidence of Crohn’s disease in females for both asthma and COPD patients was significantly higher than in males for most age groups with the exception of children under the age of 10 and adults over 70 years old. We found no significant difference between the sexes in terms of incident ulcerative colitis cases in the asthma cohort. There was a significantly higher incidence of ulcerative colitis cases in males over the age of 50 years compared to females in the COPD cohort. Our findings are in agreement with the sex distribution of IBD in the general population [9, 10, 30]. The age-specific sex distribution in Crohn’s disease incident cases and the predominance of female subjects (64%) in the asthma cohort also reflect the higher number of female patients with asthma in Québec [11].
One of the limitations of our study is related to the use of prescription information to identify cases with airway disease, given that in Québec about 40% of the population, including all residents over the age of 65 years, is covered by the public drug plan. This may have an impact on the generalisability of our findings regarding the association between asthma and incident Crohn’s disease in children and young adults. Further studies are needed to confirm such an association in other provinces or jurisdictions where prescription information is available for all age groups. However, given that all prescriptions for residents aged 65 years and older are part of the public drug plan, the use of prescription information will have little impact on the generalisability of our results regarding the association between COPD and incident IBD in seniors.
Another factor that may limit the generalisability of the findings is the genetic mix of the Québec population resulting from immigration. A study addressing the epidemiology of Crohn’s disease in Québec has shown that a proportion of immigrants above 10% in health-related geographical divisions was associated with a significantly lower incidence of Crohn’s disease; in contrast, a proportion of Jewish descendants above 20% was associated with a significantly increased incidence of Crohn’s disease [9]. Further studies in other geographical locations may be needed to confirm such findings.
Another limitation stems from the lack of information regarding smoking, a common limitation in studies based on administrative health data. Tobacco smoking is a known risk factor for both COPD and Crohn’s disease, and a protective factor for ulcerative colitis [31], and it may, in part, explain the association between these diseases. However, Ekbom et al. [2] found that the risk of Crohn’s disease in COPD patients was higher than the risk attributable to smoking alone, and that the risk of ulcerative colitis was also increased. If the association between COPD and IBD would be due entirely to the confounding effect of smoking, then the number of ulcerative colitis cases in patients with COPD should be small. Our results show a significantly higher incidence of ulcerative colitis among patients with COPD aged 60 years and older. Therefore, we believe it is unlikely that smoking alone could have accounted for the increased number of incident IBD cases.
To date, this is the first population-based study to investigate the association between airway diseases and incidence of IBD. The identification of airway disease patients through prescriptions for specific respiratory medication was shown to be valid and was used in many administrative health database studies [15, 16, 18, 19]. The incidence of IBD in asthma and COPD patients was assessed using the same methodological approach as in our previous work addressing IBD incidence in the general population of Québec, therefore insuring direct comparability of results by age, sex and time period [10].
In conclusion, the incidences of both Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis were significantly increased in asthma and COPD patients during 2001–2006 compared to the general population of Québec. Women with asthma were more likely to develop Crohn’s disease than men, and men with COPD were more likely to develop ulcerative colitis than women. Confirmation of such results in future studies may have implications in earlier detection of IBD and in the therapeutic management of patients. Medical professionals involved in the care of airway disease patients who develop digestive symptoms need to be aware of the possible occurrence of new cases of IBD, even in older age groups and regardless of smoking status.
Footnotes
A press release for this article is available from www.erj.ersjournals.com/site/misc/presspack.xhtml
Support statement: Financial support for this study was provided through internal funding from McGill University Health Centre.
Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside the online version of this article at erj.ersjournals.com
- Received April 28, 2014.
- Accepted October 7, 2014.
- Copyright ©ERS 2015