Incidence, Prevalence, and Racial and Ethnic Distribution of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in the United States

Published in Gastroenterology, November 1, 2023 | Online publication on July 20, 2023

Author(s): James D Lewis, Lauren E Parlett, Michele L Jonsson Funk, Colleen M Brensinger, Virginia Pate, Qufei Wu, Ghadeer K Dawwas, Alexandra Weiss, Brad D Constant, Maureen McCauley, Kevin Haynes, Jeff Y Yang, Douglas E Schaubel, Andres Hurtado-Lorenzo, Michael D Kappelman

DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2023.07.003 | Pubmed ID: 37481117

Abstract

Background & aims: We sought to estimate the incidence, prevalence, and racial-ethnic distribution of physician-diagnosed inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in the United States.

Methods: The study used 4 administrative claims data sets: a 20% random sample of national fee-for-service Medicare data (2007 to 2017); Medicaid data from Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and California (1999 to 2012); and commercial health insurance data from Anthem beneficiaries (2006 to 2018) and Optum's deidentified Clinformatics Data Mart (2000 to 2017). We used validated combinations of medical diagnoses, diagnostic procedures, and prescription medications to identify incident and prevalent diagnoses. We computed pooled age-, sex-, and race/ethnicity-specific insurance-weighted estimates and pooled estimates standardized to 2018 United States Census estimates with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).

Results: The age- and sex-standardized incidence of IBD per 100,000 person-years was 10.9 (95% CI, 10.6-11.2). The incidence of IBD peaked in the third decade of life, decreased to a relatively stable level across the fourth to eighth decades, and declined further. The age-, sex- and insurance-standardized prevalence of IBD was 721 per 100,000 population (95% CI, 717-726). Extrapolated to the 2020 United States Census, an estimated 2.39 million Americans are diagnosed with IBD. The prevalence of IBD per 100,000 population was 812 (95% CI, 802-823) in White, 504 (95% CI, 482-526) in Black, 403 (95% CI, 373-433) in Asian, and 458 (95% CI, 440-476) in Hispanic Americans.

Conclusions: IBD is diagnosed in >0.7% of Americans. The incidence peaks in early adulthood and then plateaus at a lower rate. The disease is less commonly diagnosed in Black, Asian, and Hispanic Americans.

Keywords: Crohn’s Disease; Epidemiology; Medicaid; Medicare; Race; Ulcerative Colitis.

Copyright © 2023 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Tags

Analytic: incidence | prevalence | standardized | descriptive

Data Source: claims | multi-database

Research Focus: inflammatory bowel disease | health disparities

Study Design: No tags set.

Funding Transparency

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Entry last updated (DMY): 15-12-2024.