Department of Internal Medicine and Clinical Nutrition, Institute of Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden. Center for Functional Gastrointestinal and Motility Disorders, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2018 Jul;113(7):1017-1025. doi: 10.1038/s41395-018-0074-z. Epub 2018 Jun 8.
The diagnostic criteria for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) have recently been updated from Rome III to Rome IV. Whereas in Rome III a diagnosis of IBS entailed chronic abdominal pain or discomfort at least 3 days per month, in Rome IV the term discomfort has been removed and the frequency of abdominal pain increased to at least 1 day per week. We examined how this change in IBS criteria impacts on clinical characteristics and pathophysiological factors.
A total of 542 Swedish subjects with Rome III IBS completed a baseline questionnaire enquiring for the number of abdominal pain days in the last 10 days; this was subsequently used as a surrogate marker to identify Rome IV IBS, in that (a) those with 0 or 1 day of pain were classed as Rome IV-negative, and (b) those with ≥2 days of pain were classed as Rome IV-positive. Comparisons were made between Rome IV-positive and -negative IBS groups for demographics, IBS subtype, gastrointestinal and psychological symptoms, somatisation, fatigue, disease-specific quality of life, rectal sensitivity, and oro-anal transit time.
Overall, 85% of Rome III IBS patients fulfilled the Rome IV criteria for IBS, but 15% did not. Rome IV-positive subjects were significantly more likely to be female, have poorer quality of life, greater pain severity, bloating, somatisation, fatigue, and rectal sensitivity than Rome IV-negative subjects. There were no differences in severity of anxiety or depression, IBS subtypes, bowel habit dissatisfaction, or oro-anal transit time. Finally, increasing number of pain days correlated positively with symptoms and visceral hypersensitivity.
Most Rome III-positive IBS patients seeking healthcare fulfil the Rome IV IBS criteria. They constitute a more severe group than those who lose their IBS diagnosis.
肠易激综合征(IBS)的诊断标准最近已从罗马 III 期更新为罗马 IV 期。在罗马 III 期,IBS 的诊断需要每月至少有 3 天的慢性腹痛或不适,而在罗马 IV 期,不适一词已被删除,腹痛的频率增加到每周至少 1 天。我们研究了 IBS 标准的这一变化如何影响临床特征和生理病理因素。
共有 542 名瑞典罗马 III 期 IBS 患者完成了基线问卷,询问过去 10 天中腹痛的天数;随后,将此作为罗马 IV 期 IBS 的替代标志物,即(a)疼痛天数为 0 或 1 天的患者被归类为罗马 IV 阴性,(b)疼痛天数≥2 天的患者被归类为罗马 IV 阳性。比较罗马 IV 阳性和阴性 IBS 组的人口统计学、IBS 亚型、胃肠道和心理症状、躯体化、疲劳、疾病特异性生活质量、直肠敏感性和口肛传输时间。
总体而言,85%的罗马 III 期 IBS 患者符合罗马 IV 期 IBS 的标准,但仍有 15%不符合。罗马 IV 阳性患者更可能为女性,生活质量更差,疼痛严重程度、腹胀、躯体化、疲劳和直肠敏感性更高。焦虑或抑郁严重程度、IBS 亚型、排便习惯不满意或口肛传输时间无差异。最后,疼痛天数的增加与症状和内脏高敏性呈正相关。
大多数寻求医疗保健的罗马 III 期阳性 IBS 患者符合罗马 IV 期 IBS 的标准。他们构成了一个比失去 IBS 诊断的患者更严重的群体。