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Diverticulosis and nine connective tissue disorders: epidemiological support for an association.
Connect Tissue Res. 2019 Jul; 60(4):389-398.CT

Abstract

Purpose: An underlying connective tissue disorder (CTD) may predispose to formation of intestinal diverticula. We assess the association of diverticulosis with nine selected CTDs, to inform the pathophysiology of diverticula. Methods: A population-based period-prevalence study. Individuals (3.5 million New Zealand residents born 1901-1986) with a health system record 1999-2016 were grouped into those with a hospital diagnosis of diverticulosis or diverticulitis (ICD-10-AM K57), and those without. Also recorded were any hospital diagnoses of nine selected CTDs. The association of exposure to diverticulosis and each CTD was assessed using logistic regressions adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity and region. Results: In all, 85,958 (2.4%) people had a hospital diagnosis of diverticulosis. Hospitalisation with diverticulosis was highly significantly associated with rectal prolapse (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 3.9), polycystic kidney disease (OR = 3.8), heritable syndromes (Marfan or Ehlers-Danlos) (OR = 2.4), female genital prolapse (OR = 2.3), non-aortic aneurysm (OR = 2.3), aortic aneurysm (OR = 2.2), inguinal hernia (OR = 1.9) and dislocations of shoulder and other joints (OR = 1.7), but not subarachnoid haemorrhage (OR = 1.0). Conclusion: People with diverticulosis are more likely to have colonic extracellular matrix (ECM)/connective tissue alterations in anatomical areas other than the bowel, suggesting linked ECM/connective tissue pathology. Although biases may exist, the results indicate large-scale integrated studies are needed to investigate underlying genetic pathophysiology of colonic diverticula, together with fundamental biological studies to investigate cellular phenotypes and ECM changes.

Authors+Show Affiliations

a Freemasons' Department of Geriatric Medicine , University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.a Freemasons' Department of Geriatric Medicine , University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.b Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health & Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases , London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine , London , UK.c Department of Medicine , University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.d Department of Surgery , University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.e Primary Care, Department of General Practice and Primary Healthcare , University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.d Department of Surgery , University of Auckland , Auckland , New Zealand.f Waitemata District Health Board , University of Auckland, and Geriatrician , Auckland , New Zealand.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

30719942

Citation

Broad, Joanna B., et al. "Diverticulosis and Nine Connective Tissue Disorders: Epidemiological Support for an Association." Connective Tissue Research, vol. 60, no. 4, 2019, pp. 389-398.
Broad JB, Wu Z, Clark TG, et al. Diverticulosis and nine connective tissue disorders: epidemiological support for an association. Connect Tissue Res. 2019;60(4):389-398.
Broad, J. B., Wu, Z., Clark, T. G., Musson, D., Jaung, R., Arroll, B., Bissett, I. P., & Connolly, M. J. (2019). Diverticulosis and nine connective tissue disorders: epidemiological support for an association. Connective Tissue Research, 60(4), 389-398. https://doi.org/10.1080/03008207.2019.1570169
Broad JB, et al. Diverticulosis and Nine Connective Tissue Disorders: Epidemiological Support for an Association. Connect Tissue Res. 2019;60(4):389-398. PubMed PMID: 30719942.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Diverticulosis and nine connective tissue disorders: epidemiological support for an association. AU - Broad,Joanna B, AU - Wu,Zhenqiang, AU - Clark,Taane G, AU - Musson,David, AU - Jaung,Rebekah, AU - Arroll,Bruce, AU - Bissett,Ian P, AU - Connolly,Martin J, Y1 - 2019/02/05/ PY - 2019/2/6/pubmed PY - 2020/8/8/medline PY - 2019/2/6/entrez KW - Connective tissue disorders KW - Diverticulosis KW - Genetic KW - Incidental findings KW - Observational studies KW - Pathophysiology SP - 389 EP - 398 JF - Connective tissue research JO - Connect Tissue Res VL - 60 IS - 4 N2 - Purpose: An underlying connective tissue disorder (CTD) may predispose to formation of intestinal diverticula. We assess the association of diverticulosis with nine selected CTDs, to inform the pathophysiology of diverticula. Methods: A population-based period-prevalence study. Individuals (3.5 million New Zealand residents born 1901-1986) with a health system record 1999-2016 were grouped into those with a hospital diagnosis of diverticulosis or diverticulitis (ICD-10-AM K57), and those without. Also recorded were any hospital diagnoses of nine selected CTDs. The association of exposure to diverticulosis and each CTD was assessed using logistic regressions adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity and region. Results: In all, 85,958 (2.4%) people had a hospital diagnosis of diverticulosis. Hospitalisation with diverticulosis was highly significantly associated with rectal prolapse (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 3.9), polycystic kidney disease (OR = 3.8), heritable syndromes (Marfan or Ehlers-Danlos) (OR = 2.4), female genital prolapse (OR = 2.3), non-aortic aneurysm (OR = 2.3), aortic aneurysm (OR = 2.2), inguinal hernia (OR = 1.9) and dislocations of shoulder and other joints (OR = 1.7), but not subarachnoid haemorrhage (OR = 1.0). Conclusion: People with diverticulosis are more likely to have colonic extracellular matrix (ECM)/connective tissue alterations in anatomical areas other than the bowel, suggesting linked ECM/connective tissue pathology. Although biases may exist, the results indicate large-scale integrated studies are needed to investigate underlying genetic pathophysiology of colonic diverticula, together with fundamental biological studies to investigate cellular phenotypes and ECM changes. SN - 1607-8438 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/30719942/full_citation DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -