The Care of Children and Adolescents With Chronic Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Cluster-Randomized Trial on Improving the Guideline Conformity of Treatment by the Use of the CEDATA-GPGE Patient Registry 

Tischler L, Boerkoel A, Krause H, van den Berg N, de Laffolie J. 

The Care of Children and Adolescents With Chronic Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Cluster-Randomized Trial on Improving the Guideline Conformity of Treatment by the Use of the CEDATA-GPGE Patient Registry. Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2024 Sep 20;(Forthcoming):arztebl.m2024.0168. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.m2024.0168. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 39163213.

DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.m2024.0168

Abstract

Background: For children and adolescents with chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), treatment that is not in adequate conformity with the guidelines can adversely affect both the course of disease and the patients‘ development. The targeted use of digital patient registries may improve real-life adherence to the recommendations of evidence-based guidelines. 

Methods: In a cluster-randomized, controlled trial (DRKS00015505), treatment providers for the intervention group (IG) documented the treatment of children and adolescents with IBD in the CEDATA-GPGE patient registry; they received automated feedback on the data they entered and on potential deviations of the documented treatment from recommendations contained in the guidelines (care deficits). Treatments providers for the control group (CG) documented treatments as previously, i.e., only in the patients‘ charts. At the end of a twelve-month observation period, the data from both groups at baseline and on follow-up were analyzed in an intergroup comparison. The primary endpoint was the number of care deficits at twelve months. 

Results: 319 patients were recruited from 47 pediatric gastroenterological centers in Germany (IG: 21 centers and 160 subjects; CG: 26 centers and 159 subjects). Among the 146 subjects in the IG who were followed up at 12 months, there were an average (mean) of 0.17 care deficits per patient (95% confidence interval [0.10; 0.24]). Among the 134 subjects in the CG who were followed up at 12 months, there were an average (mean) of 0.55 [0.43; 0.66] identified care deficits per patient (p < 0.0001). 

Conclusion: Registry-based feedback can help bring treatment and its documentation into better conformity with the relevant guidelines and thereby reduce or prevent care deficits in children and adolescents with IBD. 

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