Denver Public Health, Denver, Colorado, USA.
BMJ Open. 2013 Dec 5;3(12):e003801. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003801.
The aim of this study was to assess the risk of incident rheumatological diagnoses (RD) associated with self-reported diarrhoea and vomiting during a first-time deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan. Such an association would provide evidence that RD in this population may include individuals with reactive arthritis (ReA) from deployment-related infectious gastroenteritis.
This case-control epidemiological study used univariate and multivariate logistic regression to compare the odds of self-reported diarrhoea/vomiting among deployed US military personnel with incident RD to the odds of diarrhoea/vomiting among a control population.
We analysed health records of personnel deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan, including responses on a postdeployment health assessment and medical follow-up postdeployment.
Anonymous data were obtained from 891 US military personnel with at least 6 months of medical follow-up following a first-time deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan in 2008-2009. Cases were defined using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) diagnosis codes; controls had an unrelated medical encounter and were representative of the study population.
The primary measure was an association between incident RD and self-reported diarrhoea/vomiting during deployment. A secondary measure was the overall incidence of RD in this population.
We identified 98 cases of new onset RD, with a total incidence of 161/100 000 persons. Of those, two participants had been diagnosed with Reiter's disease (i) (3.3/100 000 persons) and the remainder with non-specific arthritis/arthralgia (157.5/100 000 persons). The OR for acute diarrhoea was 2.67 (p=0.03) after adjusting for important covariates.
Incident rheumatological conditions, even those classified as 'non-specific,' are significantly associated with prior severe diarrhoea in previously deployed military personnel, potentially indicating ReA and need for preventive measures to reduce diarrhoeagenic bacterial exposures in military personnel and other travellers to the developing regions.
本研究旨在评估首次部署到伊拉克或阿富汗期间自述腹泻和呕吐与新发风湿性疾病(RD)诊断相关的风险。这种关联将为这一人群中的 RD 可能包括因与部署相关的传染性肠胃炎而患反应性关节炎(ReA)的个体提供证据。
本病例对照的流行病学研究采用单变量和多变量逻辑回归来比较部署期间报告腹泻/呕吐的美国军事人员与对照组中报告腹泻/呕吐的 RD 发生率的几率。
我们分析了部署到伊拉克或阿富汗的人员的健康记录,包括部署后健康评估和部署后医疗随访的回复。
从 2008 年至 2009 年首次部署到伊拉克或阿富汗的 891 名美国军事人员中获得匿名数据,这些人员至少有 6 个月的医疗随访。病例通过国际疾病分类,第九修订版,临床修正(ICD-9-CM)诊断代码来定义;对照组则是进行了无关的医疗接触,是研究人群的代表性。
主要衡量标准是新发 RD 与部署期间自述腹泻/呕吐之间的关联。次要衡量标准是该人群 RD 的总体发生率。
我们发现 98 例新发 RD,总发病率为 161/100000 人。其中,有两名患者被诊断为 Reiter 病(i)(3.3/100000 人),其余患者为非特异性关节炎/关节痛(157.5/100000 人)。在调整了重要协变量后,急性腹泻的 OR 为 2.67(p=0.03)。
即使是被归类为“非特异性”的新发风湿性疾病与先前部署的军事人员中先前严重腹泻显著相关,这可能表明存在反应性关节炎,需要采取预防措施以减少军事人员和前往发展中地区的其他旅行者的腹泻性细菌暴露。