Clemens J Quentin, Meenan Richard T, O'Keeffe Rosetti Maureen C, Brown Sheila O, Gao Sara Y, Calhoun Elizabeth A
Department of Urology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA.
J Urol. 2005 Aug;174(2):576-80. doi: 10.1097/01.ju.0000165170.43617.be.
We calculated the prevalence of symptoms typically associated with interstitial cystitis (IC) in men and women in a managed care population in the Pacific Northwest.
International Classification of Diseases-9 based queries of the Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Portland, Oregon database were used to identify subjects with IC exclusion criteria, who were excluded from further analysis. A total of 10,000 questionnaires, including 5,000 for women and 5,000 for men, were mailed to subjects with codes indicating bladder symptoms and to those with none of the codes. The questionnaires included questions about the presence of IC symptoms and the O'Leary-Sant interstitial cystitis questionnaire. IC symptoms were defined in 2 ways, that is as 1) pelvic pain at least 3 months in duration plus urgency or frequency at least 3 months in duration and 2) the same criteria plus pain increasing as the bladder fills and/or pain relieved by urination.
The prevalence of IC symptoms according to definitions 1 and 2 was 11.2% and 6.2% in women, and 4.6% and 2.3% in men, respectively. Symptoms were long-standing (duration greater than 1 year in 80% of cases) and bothersome (severity score 5 or greater in greater than 50%). Mean O'Leary-Sant interstitial cystitis questionnaire scores were 15.94 in subjects with definition 1 IC symptoms, 18.97 in those with definition 2 IC symptoms and 6.69 in those with no IC symptoms (p <0.001). Symptoms were most common and most severe in subjects previously diagnosed with IC.
The prevalence of IC symptoms is 30 to 50-fold higher in women and 60 to 100-fold higher in men than the prevalence of a coded physician diagnosis of IC in the same population. Although these findings are not conclusive, they imply that IC may be significantly under diagnosed.
我们计算了太平洋西北地区管理式医疗人群中男性和女性间质性膀胱炎(IC)典型相关症状的患病率。
利用俄勒冈州波特兰市凯撒永久医疗集团西北分部数据库中基于国际疾病分类第九版的查询,识别出患有IC排除标准的受试者,并将其排除在进一步分析之外。总共向有膀胱症状编码的受试者和没有这些编码的受试者邮寄了10,000份问卷,其中女性5,000份,男性5,000份。问卷包括关于IC症状的存在情况以及奥利里 - 桑特间质性膀胱炎问卷的问题。IC症状以两种方式定义,即1)持续至少3个月的盆腔疼痛加上持续至少3个月的尿急或尿频,以及2)相同标准加上膀胱充盈时疼痛加剧和/或排尿后疼痛缓解。
根据定义1和定义2,女性IC症状的患病率分别为11.2%和6.2%,男性分别为4.6%和2.3%。症状持续时间长(80%的病例持续时间超过1年)且令人困扰(超过50%的病例严重程度评分为5或更高)。定义1的IC症状受试者的平均奥利里 - 桑特间质性膀胱炎问卷评分为15.94,定义2的IC症状受试者为18.97,无IC症状受试者为6.69(p<0.001)。症状在先前诊断为IC的受试者中最为常见和严重。
IC症状的患病率在女性中比同一人群中编码的医生诊断的IC患病率高30至50倍,在男性中高60至100倍。尽管这些发现尚无定论,但它们暗示IC可能存在显著的诊断不足。