Mountifield Réme, Bampton Peter, Prosser Ruth, Muller Kate, Andrews Jane M
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Flinders Medical Centre, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2009 May;15(5):720-5. doi: 10.1002/ibd.20839.
Smaller family size and voluntary childlessness has been reported in IBD; however, the disease-related reasons for this from a patient viewpoint are not described. The aims were to 1) determine whether IBD patients' perceptions of the issues surrounding IBD, pregnancy, and childbearing influence their reproductive behavior, and 2) describe these specific perceptions and concerns related to fertility and pregnancy.
All contactable subjects between 18-50 years of age from a hospital-based IBD database were surveyed by postal questionnaire. Data were obtained regarding age, gender, IBD diagnosis and treatment, body image and sexual relationships, as well as both objective and subjective data regarding fertility and pregnancy. Comparisons were made to community norms where data were available. Contingency tables with Fisher's exact test were used.
Of 365 subjects, 255 responded (70%). The mean age was 35.5 years overall, 34.7 years for women. In all, 34% of participants were male, 127 had Crohn's disease (CD), 85 ulcerative colitis (UC), and 5 indeterminate colitis (IC). The average fertility rate was no different between women with CD and UC (1.0 and 1.2 births/woman, respectively; P = 0.553), compared with 1.81 for all Australian women. Although 42.7% of IBD patients reported a fear of infertility, patients only sought medical fertility advice at the same rate as the general population. Fear of infertility was most evident in women, those with CD, and those reporting previous surgery. Specific patient concerns, which appear to have decreased patients' family size, included IBD heritability, the risk of congenital abnormalities, and medication teratogenicity.
The unusually high response rate indicates the centrality of reproductive issues to IBD patients. "Voluntary" childlessness in this group appears to result from concerns about adverse reproductive outcomes that may not be justified. Patients require accurate counseling addressing fertility and pregnancy outcomes in IBD to assist in their decision making.
炎症性肠病(IBD)患者家庭规模较小以及自愿不育的情况已有报道;然而,从患者角度来看,导致这种情况的疾病相关原因尚未得到描述。本研究的目的是:1)确定IBD患者对IBD、妊娠和生育相关问题的看法是否会影响其生殖行为;2)描述这些与生育力和妊娠相关的具体看法及担忧。
通过邮寄问卷对一家医院IBD数据库中年龄在18至50岁之间且可联系到的所有受试者进行调查。收集了有关年龄、性别、IBD诊断和治疗、身体形象和性关系的数据,以及有关生育力和妊娠的客观和主观数据。在有可用数据的情况下,与社区标准进行比较。使用带有Fisher精确检验的列联表。
365名受试者中,255人回复(70%)。总体平均年龄为35.5岁,女性为34.7岁。共有34%的参与者为男性,127人患有克罗恩病(CD),85人患有溃疡性结肠炎(UC),5人患有不确定性结肠炎(IC)。CD女性和UC女性的平均生育率无差异(分别为每名女性1.0次和1.2次分娩;P = 0.553),而所有澳大利亚女性的平均生育率为1.81。尽管42.7%的IBD患者表示担心不孕,但患者寻求医学生育建议的比例与普通人群相同。对不孕的恐惧在女性、患有CD的患者以及曾接受手术的患者中最为明显。患者的具体担忧似乎导致了家庭规模减小,这些担忧包括IBD的遗传性、先天性异常的风险以及药物致畸性。
异常高的回复率表明生殖问题在IBD患者中具有核心地位。该群体中“自愿”不育似乎是由于对可能不合理的不良生殖结果的担忧所致。患者需要关于IBD生育力和妊娠结局的准确咨询,以帮助他们做出决策。