Natural history and impact of irritable bowel syndrome-type symptoms in inflammatory bowel disease during 12 months of longitudinal follow-up

NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY(2024)

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摘要
BackgroundLittle is known about the natural history and impact of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-type symptoms on psychological health and quality of life in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We aimed to address this in a 12-month longitudinal follow-up study of secondary care patients.MethodsWe collected demographic, Rome III IBS-type symptom, psychological, and quality of life data, with questionnaires at 3-month intervals, over 12 months of follow-up in patients with IBD in clinical remission at baseline. We assessed the natural history of Rome III IBS-type symptoms over the 12 months of the study and compared psychological and quality of life data between those reporting Rome III IBS-type symptoms at each of the points of follow-up with those not reporting such symptoms.Key ResultsAmong 206 patients with IBD in clinical remission at baseline (104 [50.5%] women, mean age 56.9 years [range 18-83 years], 79 [38.3%] Crohn's disease), 33 (16.0%) reported Rome III IBS-type symptoms at baseline and 72 (35.0%) reported Rome III IBS-type symptoms at one or more time points. Among the 33 patients with Rome III IBS-type symptoms at baseline, symptoms resolved in 6 (18.2%) patients, were present throughout in 6 (18.2%) patients, and fluctuated in the remaining 21 (63.6%) patients. Among the 39 patients with new onset of Rome III IBS-type symptoms after baseline, 24 (65.1%) had symptoms at one point in time only, 10 (25.6%) at two points, four (10.3%) at three points, and one (2.6%) at four points. At each point in time, reporting IBS-type symptoms was associated with significantly higher anxiety, depression, or somatoform symptom-reporting scores, and/or lower quality of life scores.Conclusions & InferencesIn this 12-month follow-up study, one-third of patients with IBD reported presence of Rome III IBS-type symptoms at any point in time. Reporting such symptoms was associated with significant impacts on psychological health and/or quality of life. This 12-month longitudinal study, with regular follow-up at 3-month intervals, has examined the natural history of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-type symptoms in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in clinical remission. One-third of patients with IBD in clinical remission reported IBS-type symptoms, according to Rome III criteria, at one or more points of follow-up. Among those reporting IBS-type symptoms at each of the points of follow-up, hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS)-A, HADS-D, and patient health questionnaire-12 scores were higher, and SIBDQ scores lower than in patients not reporting such symptoms.image
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关键词
IBS-type symptoms,inflammatory bowel disease,irritable bowel syndrome
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