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April Naegeli, Yan Dong, Xian Zhou, Nathan Morris, Vipin Arora, Trevor Lissoos, P121 REAL WORLD PREVALENCE OF BOWEL MOVEMENT URGENCY – A SNAPSHOT OF SYMPTOM EXPERIENCE REPORTED BY PATIENTS WITH ULCERATIVE COLITIS PARTICIPATING IN SPARC IBD, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, Volume 26, Issue Supplement_1, January 2020, Pages S44–S45, https://doi.org/10.1093/ibd/zaa010.116
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Abstract
Urgency, also referred to as bowel movement urgency or bowel urgency, is the sudden need for a bowel movement. Bowel urgency is one of the most bothersome and important symptoms experienced by patients with ulcerative colitis (UC), contributing to decrements in quality of life. Bowel urgency is distinct from the common symptoms associated with UC, namely stool frequency and rectal bleeding, however patients often experience all symptoms, urgent, frequent bowel movements with bleeding, concurrently. Bowel movement urgency is a key symptom for triggering clinical consideration of UC diagnosis and for defining more severe disease activity in clinical practice.
The results published here are based on data obtained from the IBD Plexus program of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation. To better understand the prevalence of bowel movement urgency in patients with UC, an ad hoc analysis was performed using data from a Study of a Prospective Adult Research Cohort with IBD (SPARC IBD), a multicenter longitudinal study of adult patients with IBD that collects and links clinical data, patient-reported outcome (PRO) data, and serial bio-samples throughout the course of the patients’ disease. The enrollment visit was defined as 7 days from the patients’ date of enrollment in SPARC IBD. At study enrollment, patients were asked to answer questions based on their symptom experiences. Patients reported how much urgency they experienced before bowel movements on average during the past 3 days (none, mild, moderate, moderately severe, severe, not applicable). Descriptive analyses for patient demographic and disease characteristics were conducted. Additionally, contingency table analyses were conducted exploring the association of urgency with other UC symptoms and other measures of UC disease severity.
Of 1,833 patients included in the SPARC IBD data cutoff of May 13, 2019 (Enrolled from 08 November 2016 to 15 May 2019), 582 were patients with UC, of which 514 had urgency data available. Overall, 51.8% of patients were male, and the mean age is 42.4 years (Table 1). At enrollment, 59.7% of patients reported some level (mild, moderate, moderately severe/severe) of urgency. Forty-six percent of UC patients with urgency data were receiving biologic treatment with 31% still reporting mild urgency, and 32% reporting moderate to severe urgency (Table 1). The severity of urgency was associated with patient reported severity of other UC symptoms and disease activity (Table 2).
Results from ad hoc analyses using a real-world sample of patients with UC suggest that bowel movement urgency is a prevalent symptom of UC which varies with disease activity.

