bb‐Baron 2005.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Case control study ‐ to examine environmental risk factors prior to the development of inflammatory bowel disease in a paediatric population‐based case‐control study | |
Participants | This was a population‐based matched case‐control study. Cases were all patients from the EPIMAD registry (registry of IBD in Northern France since 1988) who had a diagnosis of either CD or UC between January 1988 and December 1997 and were less than 17 years old at the time of IBD diagnosis. Controls were randomly selected from telephone number lists (random‐digit dialling) and matched 1:1 to each case by age (2 years), sex, and living area (region). A total of 222 incident cases of Crohn’s disease and 60 incident cases of ulcerative colitis occurring before 17 years of age between January 1988 and December 1997 were matched with 1 control participant by sex, age, and geographical location. We recorded 140 study variables in a questionnaire that covered familial history of inflammatory bowel disease, events during the perinatal period, infant and child diet, vaccinations and childhood diseases, household amenities, and the family’s socioeconomic status. |
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Interventions | MMR vaccination | |
Outcomes | Crohn’s disease; ulcerative colitis | |
Funding Source | Government | |
Notes | Conclusions: whilst family history and appendicectomy are known risk factors, changes in risk based on domestic promiscuity, certain vaccinations, and dietary factors may provide new aetiological clues. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
CCS ‐ case selection | Low risk | Adequate ‐ regional registry |
CCS ‐ control selection | Unclear risk | Probable selection bias ‐ community ‐ random‐digit dialling |
CCS ‐ comparability | Low risk | Case by age (2 years), sex, and living area (region) |
CCS ‐ exposures | Unclear risk | Probable information bias ‐ exposition self‐reported |
Summary Risk of Bias assessment | Unclear risk | We had concerns regarding at least 1 domain such that some doubt is raised about the results. |