年龄、疾病严重程度和体重指数对克罗恩病儿童和青少年骨骼健康和生长的影响

JPGN reports Pub Date : 2024-01-04 DOI:10.1002/jpr3.12037
R. Kherati, Archana Bansal, J. Oleksiewicz, A. Kadir, Natasha Burgess, Sabrina Barr, Sandhia Naik, Nick Crof, Marco Gasparetto
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在探讨儿科克罗恩病(CD)特征、骨骼健康和生长参数在诊断和随访时的相关性。研究人员收集了2018年1月至2019年12月期间新诊断为CD的47名4-16岁儿童的回顾性数据。平均随访时间为2.5年。11名儿童(24%)在诊断时出现生长迟缓,9名记录在案的儿童中有4名(44%)在随访时仍有生长迟缓。在接受检测的 35 名儿童中,20 人(57%)在诊断时维生素 D 水平不足(<50 mmol/L)。37名儿童(79%)在确诊时接受了双能X射线吸收扫描,其中20名儿童至少有一项Z-分数偏低。骨矿密度和骨矿浓度Z值较低的儿童确诊时年龄较小(p = .042 和 p = .021),病情较重(p = .04 和 p = .029),确诊时体重指数较低(p < .001)。被诊断为 CD ≥11岁的儿童的身高速度低于预期(p < .0001 和 p < .001)。多变量回归分析表明,诊断年龄越大,随访时身高速度越低的预测因素越明显。维生素 D 是一种可获得的成分,如果得到优化,可改善所有这三个因素。系统地监测和优化每个方面有可能使儿童实现其骨骼健康和生长潜力。
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The impact of age, disease severity, and BMI on bone health and growth in children and young people with Crohn's disease
The objective of this study was to explore the correlation between paediatric Crohn's disease (CD) characteristics, bone health and growth parameters at diagnosis and follow‐up.Retrospective data was collected for 47 children aged 4–16 who were newly diagnosed with CD between January 2018 and December 2019. Mean follow‐up time was 2.5 years.Eleven (24%) children had growth delay at diagnosis, which persisted in 4 (44%) of 9 recorded children at follow‐up. Of the 35 children tested, 20 (57%) had inadequate Vitamin D levels (<50 mmol/L) at diagnosis. Thirty‐seven (79%) children had a dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry scan at diagnosis, with 20 of them having at least 1 low Z‐score. Children with poorer bone mineral density and bone mineral concentration Z‐scores for age had a younger age at diagnosis (p = .042 and p = .021), more severe disease (p = .04 and p = .029) and a lower BMI (p < .001) at diagnosis. Children diagnosed with CD ≥11 years had a lower‐than‐expected height velocity (p < .0001 and p < .001). Multivariate regression analysis demonstrated an older age of diagnosis was a significant predictor of a lower height velocity at follow‐up.Disease severity and age of diagnosis are important CD‐related factors that influence bone health and growth. Vitamin D is an accessible component that if optimised can improve all three factors. Monitoring and optimising each aspect systematically has the potential to enable children to achieve their bone health and growth potentials.
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