JF McLaughin et al. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol 2025; 23: 825-834. Travel Time to Treating Center Is Associated With Diagnostic Delay in Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease
This was a cross-sectional study of newly diagnosed pediatric patients (n=869) with IBD at 22 United States sites from 2019 to 2022. 57% were diagnosed with CD, 34% with UC, and 4% with IBD-U.
Key findings:
- Overall, the mean time from symptom onset to diagnosis was 265.9 days
- Factors associated with longer diagnosis time included CD vs UC (odds ratio [OR], 2.6), and longer travel time to clinic (>1 hour [OR, 1.7], >2 hours [OR, 1.8] each vs <30 minutes)
- There was no association with race, ethnicity, birth country, gender, parent education, household income, insurance type, health literacy, and health system distrust
The finding that there is a longer diagnostic delay with CD than UC is consistent with prior studies. The longer travel time has not been widely recognized as a factor associated with delayed diagnosis, though it has been associated with other negative outcomes like higher mortality with chronic liver disease.
Regarding the lack of a negative impact from factors like race/ethnicity and income, my suspicion is that this is probably related to several factors:
- Overall, the pediatric age group has a very high rate of being insured as most children without commercial insurance currently qualify for Medicaid. This helps improve access to needed/timely health care
- A recent study showed that pediatric GI specialists do not have disparities in treatment compared to pediatric GI providers with an IBD focus; thus, pediatric specialists are more likely to minimize treatment delay (Treatment Disparities in Adult vs. Pediatric IBD Care Related to Provider Specialization)
- Parents help limit diagnostic delay in their children
My take: There are many places that are far away from pediatric specialists. This results in diagnostic delays.
Related blog posts:
- Distance from Transplant Center -Not a Good Thing for Chronic Liver Disease DS Goldberg et al. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol 2017; 15: 958-60 showed that increased distance to a liver transplant center was associated with higher mortality for patients with chronic liver failure (CLF).
- Outcomes Associated with Delayed Diagnosis in Pediatric Crohn’s Disease
- How Often is Arthritis a Presenting Feature of Pediatric IBD & How to Make the Right Diagnosis
- Dr. John Barnard: Trends in Pediatric Workforce — A Growing Concern
- 1000th Tweet: GI Symptoms Preceding IBD Diagnosis
- Delays in diagnosing Crohn’s disease
- Double Whammy: Coexistent IBD and Celiac Disease in Children
