Behavioral Medicine Clinic, Department of Medicine, University at Buffalo School of Medicine, SUNY, Buffalo, New York, USA.
Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2014 Feb;109(2):224-33. doi: 10.1038/ajg.2013.410. Epub 2014 Jan 14.
In the absence of a reliable biomarker, clinical decisions for a functional gastrointestinal (GI) disorder like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) depend on asking patients to appraise and communicate their health status. Self-ratings of health (SRH) have proven a powerful and consistent predictor of health outcomes, but little is known about how they relate to those relevant to IBS (e.g., quality of life (QOL), IBS symptom severity). This study examined what psychosocial factors, if any, predict SRH among a cohort of more severe IBS patients.
Subjects included 234 Rome III-positive IBS patients (mean age=41 years, female=78%) without comorbid organic GI disease. Subjects were administered a test battery that included the IBS Symptom Severity Scale, Screening for Somatoform Symptoms, IBS Medical Comorbidity Inventory, SF-12 Vitality Scale, Perceived Stress Scale, Beck Depression Inventory, Trait Anxiety Inventory, and Negative Interactions Scale.
Partial correlations identified somatization, depression, fatigue, stress, anxiety, and medical comorbidities as variables with the strongest correlations with SRH (r values=0.36-0.41, P values <0.05). IBS symptom severity was weakly associated with SRH (r=0.18, P<0.05). The final regression model explained 41.3% of the variance in SRH scores (F=8.49, P<0.001) with significant predictors including fatigue, medical comorbidities, somatization, and negative social interactions.
SRH are associated with psychological (anxiety, stress, depression), social (negative interactions), and extraintestinal somatic factors (fatigue, somatization, medical comorbidities). The severity of IBS symptoms appears to have a relatively modest role in how IBS patients describe their health in general.
在缺乏可靠生物标志物的情况下,对于功能性胃肠病(GI)疾病,如肠易激综合征(IBS)的临床决策取决于要求患者评估和交流他们的健康状况。自我健康评估(SRH)已被证明是健康结果的有力且一致的预测指标,但对于它们与与 IBS 相关的健康结果(例如生活质量(QOL)、IBS 症状严重程度)的关系知之甚少。本研究探讨了在更严重的 IBS 患者队列中,哪些心理社会因素(如果有的话)可以预测 SRH。
研究对象包括 234 名罗马 III 阳性 IBS 患者(平均年龄为 41 岁,女性占 78%),无合并器质性 GI 疾病。受试者接受了一系列测试,包括 IBS 症状严重程度量表、躯体症状筛查、IBS 合并症清单、SF-12 活力量表、感知压力量表、贝克抑郁量表、特质焦虑量表和负面互动量表。
偏相关分析确定躯体化、抑郁、疲劳、压力、焦虑和合并症是与 SRH 相关性最强的变量(r 值为 0.36-0.41,P 值<0.05)。IBS 症状严重程度与 SRH 呈弱相关(r=0.18,P<0.05)。最终的回归模型解释了 SRH 评分 41.3%的方差(F=8.49,P<0.001),有显著预测作用的因素包括疲劳、合并症、躯体化和负面社会互动。
SRH 与心理(焦虑、压力、抑郁)、社会(负面互动)和肠外躯体因素(疲劳、躯体化、合并症)有关。IBS 症状的严重程度似乎在 IBS 患者总体描述其健康状况方面的作用相对较小。