Whitehead William E, Palsson Olafur S, Levy Rona R, Feld Andrew D, Turner Marsha, Von Korff Michael
Center for Functional GI and Motility Disorders at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7555, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2007 Dec;102(12):2767-76. doi: 10.1111/j.1572-0241.2007.01540.x. Epub 2007 Sep 26.
Comorbid nongastrointestinal symptoms account for two-thirds of excess health-care costs in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
To determine whether IBS patients are at greater risk for specific comorbid disorders versus showing a general tendency to overreport symptoms; whether patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) show patterns of comorbidity similar to IBS; whether comorbidity is explained by psychiatric disease; and whether excess comorbidity occurs in all IBS patients.
All 3,153 patients in a health maintenance organization with a diagnosis of IBS in 1994-1995 were compared to 3,153 age- and gender-matched controls, and to 571 IBD patients. All diagnoses in a 4-yr period beginning 1 yr before their index visit were categorized as gastrointestinal, psychiatric, or nongastrointestinal somatic. Nongastrointestinal somatic diagnoses were further divided into symptom-based versus biological marker-based diagnoses.
Forty-eight of 51 symptom-based and 16 of 25 biomarker-based diagnoses were significantly more common in IBS versus controls. However, there were no unique associations. Bacterial, viral, and fungal infections and stroke were among diagnoses made more frequently in IBS. IBD patients were similar to controls. Greater somatic comorbidity was associated with concurrent psychiatric diagnosis. Only 16% of IBS patients had abnormally high numbers of comorbid diagnoses.
Comorbidity in IBS is due to a general amplification of symptom reporting and physician consultation rather than a few unique associations; this suggests biased symptom perception rather than shared pathophysiology. Comorbidity is influenced by, but is not explained by, psychiatric illness. Excess comorbidity is present in only a subset of IBS patients.
在肠易激综合征(IBS)中,共病的非胃肠道症状占额外医疗费用的三分之二。
确定IBS患者相较于普遍存在症状过度报告倾向,是否更易患特定的共病疾病;炎症性肠病(IBD)患者的共病模式是否与IBS相似;共病是否由精神疾病所致;以及所有IBS患者是否都存在过多的共病情况。
将1994 - 1995年在一家健康维护组织中诊断为IBS的3153例患者与3153例年龄和性别匹配的对照进行比较,并与571例IBD患者进行比较。从其索引就诊前1年开始的4年期间内的所有诊断分为胃肠道、精神或非胃肠道躯体诊断。非胃肠道躯体诊断进一步分为基于症状的诊断和基于生物标志物的诊断。
在基于症状的51项诊断中,有48项以及在基于生物标志物的25项诊断中,有16项在IBS患者中比对照更为常见。然而,不存在独特的关联。细菌、病毒和真菌感染以及中风是IBS中诊断更为频繁的疾病。IBD患者与对照相似。更高的躯体共病与同时存在的精神诊断相关。只有16%的IBS患者有异常多的共病诊断。
IBS中的共病是由于症状报告和就医咨询的普遍增加,而非少数独特的关联;这表明存在有偏差的症状感知,而非共同的病理生理学。共病受精神疾病影响,但不能用精神疾病来解释。仅一部分IBS患者存在过多的共病情况。