The DIVIPACT cohort profile: Evaluating the impact of colonic diverticulosis on daily life
Helene R. Dalby, Rune Erichsen, Kåre A. Gotschalck, Katrine J. Emmertsen

TL;DR
The DIVIPACT study explores how colonic diverticulosis affects daily life and quality of life in a large Danish cohort.
Contribution
The study introduces a comprehensive cohort and survey data linking self-reported health with registry data to evaluate diverticulosis impact.
Findings
1596 participants reported activity restrictions due to diverticulosis in the past 4 weeks.
Bowel function affected quality of life in 66% of inpatients, 54% of outpatients, and 44% of diverticulosis-only individuals.
The cohort provides extensive data for evaluating diverticulosis impact and informing patient-centered strategies.
Abstract
Colonic diverticulosis is asymptomatic in most subjects but can impact daily life. The DIVIPACT study comprehensively explores the impact of diverticulosis on daily life. The aim of this publication is to introduce the DIVIPACT cohort, present self‐reported data from a cross‐sectional survey and outline the potential for further research. The DIVIPACT cohort comprises subjects diagnosed with diverticulosis (K572–9) in the Central Denmark Region (five hospitals, ~1.3 million residents) between 2010 and 2022 who responded to an online questionnaire survey conducted in 2023 assessing health factors and quality of life (QoL). Self‐reported data were linked to Danish health registries for consenting responders. Responders were categorized according to previous hospital management (inpatient, outpatient or diverticulosis) and characterized based on self‐reported health factors. Of the 20…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiverticular Disease and Complications · Gastrointestinal disorders and treatments · Appendicitis Diagnosis and Management
