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Copyright ©The Author(s) 2018.
World J Gastroenterol. Jun 14, 2018; 24(22): 2363-2372
Published online Jun 14, 2018. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v24.i22.2363
Table 1 Available quality indicators-set to assess the quality of care in inflammatory bowel disease
AGACCFAPACE1Spanish1Asia
Structural QIs
IBD unit/clinic
Has access to healthcare professionals: pharmacist, ophthalmologist, rheumatologist, obstetrician and dermatologist
Has access to all of the following healthcare professionals: Dieticians, mental health worker/psychologist, stoma therapist
Has a dedicated IBD nurse.
Has at least one gastroenterologist with specialized IBD training
Has timely access to an Endoscopy Unit
Has access to CT and MRI with at least one modality with enterography
Has access to a GI radiologist and a GI histopathologist
Has access to a surgical program that performs at least 10 Ileoanal pouch operations a year
Has access to a fellowship trained colorectal surgeon
Should be integrated in a hospital with an Emergency Department
Process QIs
IBD type documented including disease location and severity
Latent tuberculosis and Hepatitis B testing before anti-TNF therapy
Appropriate initiation of steroid-sparing therapy
Clostridium difficile testing during acute flares
Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis is administered to patients according to national guidelines
Cytomegalovirus testing via flexible sigmoidoscopy in steroid-refractory UC
TPMT testing prior to thiopurine therapy
Colectomy or close surveillance for low-grade dysplasia
Surveillance colonoscopy for patients with colonic disease
Screening and counseling for smoking cessation
Vaccine education including pneumococcal and influenza
Each IBD patient should be assigned one identifiable IBD specialist in charge of their care
In patients with corticosteroid refractory IBD other induction therapies are recommended
Medical salvage therapy and surgery are offered in UC inpatients failing to respond to intravenous corticosteroids within 5 d
The IBD Unit/clinic has a mechanism to screen for mental health issues
Patients with IBD receiving maintenance immunosuppressive therapy are monitored with a blood count and liver profile every three months
Disease activity assessment is performed after initiating induction therapy
The IBD Unit/clinic has a formal process for transfer of care from pediatric to adult
IBD patients at risk for metabolic bone disease are assessed managed accordingly
Calcium and Vitamin D are recommended in conjunction with systemic corticosteroids
All HBsAg+ IBD patients should receive antiviral drugs while being treated with an anti-TNF drug
Outcomes QIs
Proportion of patients with steroid-free clinical remission (CR) for > 12-mo period
Proportion of patients currently taking prednisone (excluding those diagnosed within 112 d)
Number of days per month/year lost from school/work attributable to IBD
Number of days per year in the hospital attributable to IBD
Number of emergency room visits per year for IBD
Proportion of patients with malnutrition
Proportion of patients with anemia
Proportion of patients with normal disease-targeted health-related quality of life
Proportion of patients currently taking narcotic analgesics
Proportion of patients with nighttime BM’s or leakage
Proportion of patients with incontinence in the last month
Number of IBD-related surgeries per patient-year
Validated assessment of patient adherence to management plan