Department of Gastroenterology, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, California 90073, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2010 Apr;105(4):848-58. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2010.47. Epub 2010 Mar 2.
Guidelines emphasize that irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is not a diagnosis of exclusion and encourage clinicians to make a positive diagnosis using the Rome criteria alone. Yet many clinicians are concerned about overlooking alternative diagnoses. We measured beliefs about whether IBS is a diagnosis of exclusion, and measured testing proclivity between IBS experts and community providers.
We developed a survey to measure decision-making in two standardized patients with Rome III-positive IBS, including IBS with diarrhea (D-IBS) and IBS with constipation (C-IBS). The survey elicited provider knowledge and beliefs about IBS, including testing proclivity and beliefs regarding IBS as a diagnosis of exclusion. We surveyed nurse practitioners, primary care physicians, community gastroenterologists, and IBS experts.
Experts were less likely than nonexperts to endorse IBS as a diagnosis of exclusion (8 vs. 72%; P<0.0001). In the D-IBS vignette, experts were more likely to make a positive diagnosis of IBS (67 vs. 38%; P<0.001), to perform fewer tests (2.0 vs. 4.1; P<0.01), and to expend less money on testing (US$297 vs. $658; P<0.01). Providers who believed IBS is a diagnosis of exclusion ordered 1.6 more tests and consumed $364 more than others (P<0.0001). Experts only rated celiac sprue screening and complete blood count as appropriate in D-IBS; nonexperts rated most tests as appropriate. Parallel results were found in the C-IBS vignette.
Most community providers believe IBS is a diagnosis of exclusion; this belief is associated with increased resource use. Experts comply more closely with guidelines to diagnose IBS with minimal testing. This disconnect suggests that better implementation of guidelines is warranted to minimize variation and improve cost-effectiveness of care.
指南强调肠易激综合征(IBS)不是排他性诊断,并鼓励临床医生仅使用罗马标准进行阳性诊断。然而,许多临床医生担心会忽略其他诊断。我们测量了对 IBS 是否为排他性诊断的看法,并测量了 IBS 专家和社区提供者之间的检测倾向。
我们开发了一项调查,以衡量两位罗马 III 阳性 IBS 标准化患者的决策,包括腹泻型肠易激综合征(D-IBS)和便秘型肠易激综合征(C-IBS)。该调查征集了提供者对 IBS 的知识和看法,包括检测倾向以及对 IBS 作为排他性诊断的看法。我们调查了执业护士、初级保健医生、社区胃肠病学家和 IBS 专家。
专家比非专家更不可能将 IBS 视为排他性诊断(8%对 72%;P<0.0001)。在 D-IBS 病例中,专家更有可能做出阳性 IBS 诊断(67%对 38%;P<0.001),进行的检查更少(2.0 次对 4.1 次;P<0.01),检查费用更低(297 美元对 658 美元;P<0.01)。认为 IBS 是排他性诊断的提供者多开了 1.6 项检查,多花费了 364 美元(P<0.0001)。专家仅认为乳糜泻筛查和全血细胞计数适用于 D-IBS;非专家认为大多数检查都适用。在 C-IBS 病例中也发现了类似的结果。
大多数社区提供者认为 IBS 是排他性诊断;这种信念与资源使用的增加有关。专家更严格地遵循指南,以最低限度的检查来诊断 IBS。这种脱节表明,有必要更好地实施指南,以最小化差异并提高护理的成本效益。