Intest Res.  2013 Apr;11(2):92-99. 10.5217/ir.2013.11.2.92.

Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes of Diverticulitis by Physician's Specialty

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Kyung Hee University Hospital at Gang Dong, Kyung Hee University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. drcha@khu.ac.kr

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIMS
Several factors affecting the severity and outcomes of diverticulitis have been reported, but there is little research on physician specialty related with this disease. Therefore, we evaluated the clinical characteristics and outcomes of diverticulitis depending on physician's specialty.
METHODS
Medical records of 239 patients, who had been hospitalized with first-diagnosed acute colonic diverticulitis at Kyung Hee University Hospital in Gang Dong (Seoul, Korea) from June 2006 to December 2012, were retrospectively analyzed. The patients were classified according to whether they had been managed by gastroenterologists or not. Clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes were compared between two groups.
RESULTS
Of these 239 patients, 38 (15.9%) patients were treated by a gastroenterologist and 201 (84.1%) patients by a non-gastroenterologist. Clinical characteristics such as age, gender, body mass index, comorbidity, medication, laboratory results, recurrence and complication were not significantly different between two groups. However, right-sided diverticulitis predominated in the non-gastroenterologist group (79% vs. 91%, P=0.028). From the sub-group analysis of uncomplicated diverticulitis, intravenous antibiotics was used for a shorter period of time by gastroenterologists than non-gastroenterologists (3.3+/-1.9 days vs. 4.4+/-2.8 days, P=0.032). Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the 3 day administration of intravenous antibiotics significantly depended on the physician's specialty (odds ratio 7.984, 95% confidence interval 1.990-32.043, P=0.003).
CONCLUSIONS
The results suggest that the duration of intravenous antibiotics for treating uncomplicated colonic diverticulitis was shortened by gastroenterology specialists without increasing operation or recurrence.

Keyword

Colon; Diverticulitis; Specialty boards; Treatment outcome; Anti-bacterial agents

MeSH Terms

Anti-Bacterial Agents
Body Mass Index
Colon
Comorbidity
Diverticulitis
Diverticulitis, Colonic
Gastroenterology
Humans
Logistic Models
Medical Records
Recurrence
Retrospective Studies
Specialization
Specialty Boards
Treatment Outcome
Anti-Bacterial Agents
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