Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Division of Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Children's Hospital Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. michael.kappelman@childrens.harvard.edu
Variation in care is a ubiquitous feature of medical practice and may lead to significant differences in health care costs, quality, and outcomes. We undertook this study to determine the extent of intercenter variation in the initial management of children newly diagnosed with Crohn's disease.
We analyzed the utilization of 5 classes of medication (immunomodulators, prednisone, antibiotics, 5-aminosalicylates, and infliximab) among 311 children with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease followed at 10 North American pediatric gastroenterology centers. Multivariate logistic regression was used to compare the utilization rate of each class of medication at each of the 10 centers, adjusting for potential confounders including patient age, sex, race, disease severity, and anatomic location of disease.
Median utilization of each class of medication was: immunomodulators, 56% (range 29%-97%); prednisone, 78% (range 32%-88%); antibiotics, 29% (range 11%-68%); 5-aminosalicylates, 63.5% (range 18%-92%); and infliximab, 7.5% (range 3%-21%). Each of these treatments showed statistically significant intercenter variation in utilization (P