S136 Efficacy of Saccharomyces boulardii for Prevention of Clostridioides difficile Infection: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (original) (raw)

American Journal of Gastroenterology, 2021

Abstract

large population across the US. Methods: We reviewed data from a commercial database (Explorys Inc, Cleveland, OH, USA) that provided electronic health records from 26 major integrated US healthcare systems. We included all individuals older than 30 years. Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease or family history of gastrointestinal malignancy were excluded. Based on the Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine-Clinical Terms (SNOMED-CT), we identified cohorts of patients who had appendectomy prior to 2016 and they consisted the study group. Patients who had an intact appendix by 2016 served as control. A multivariate analysis with the main outcome being CRC, was performed and adjusted for age, gender, race, smoking, alcohol abuse, obesity, and diabetes mellitus. Results: Of 13,689,430 individuals in the database (2016-2021), 663,880 had undergone appendectomy prior to 2016 (study group). The prevalence of CRC in this group was 0.8%, which is double the prevalence detected in the control group who had an intact appendix (0.4%). Compared to controls, patients who had appendectomy were statistically more likely to develop CRC [OR: 1.52; 95% CI 1.23-1.69, P , 0.0001]. Predictors of CRC were age, male gender, non-white race, smoking, obesity (BMI . 30), alcohol abuse and diabetes. Being older than 65 years was, however was the strongest predictor. Conclusion: Our data revealed that appendectomy increases the risk of developing CRC compared to the general population. It is a large population study but is limited by its retrospective design, the unclear interval time between appendectomy and diagnosis of CRC, inability to determine cancer location, stage, and laboratory data which hindered adjustment for CRC risk. Appendectomy remains the best treatment option for appendicitis and its association with increased risk of CRC is at most debatable at this point. Prospective studies are needed to shed more light on this susceptibility.

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