Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Gynecology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Dis Colon Rectum. 2019 Jan;62(1):63-70. doi: 10.1097/DCR.0000000000001242.
Many patients with fecal incontinence report coexisting constipation. This subset of patients has not been well characterized or understood.
The purpose of this study was to report the frequency of fecal incontinence with concurrent constipation and to compare quality-of-life outcomes of patients with fecal incontinence with and without constipation.
This was a prospective cohort study. Survey data, including Fecal Incontinence Severity Index, Constipation Severity Instrument, Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life survey (categorized as lifestyle, coping, depression, and embarrassment), Pelvic Organ Prolapse Inventory and Urinary Distress Inventory surveys, and anorectal physiology testing were obtained.
The study was conducted as a single-institution study from January 2007 to January 2017.
Study patients had fecal incontinence presented to a tertiary pelvic floor center.
Quality-of-life survey findings were measured.
A total of 946 patients with fecal incontinence were identified, and 656 (69.3%) had coexisting constipation. Patients with fecal incontinence with constipation were less likely to report a history of pregnancy (89.2% vs 91.4%; p = 0.001) or complicated delivery, such as requiring instrumentation (9.1% vs 18.1%; p = 0.005), when compared with patients with isolated fecal incontinence. Patients with fecal incontinence with constipation had higher rates of coexisting pelvic organ prolapse (Pelvic Organ Prolapse Inventory: 18.4 vs 8.2; p < 0.01), higher rates of urinary incontinence (Urinary Distress Inventory: 30.2 vs 23.4; p = 0.01), and higher pressure findings on manometry; intussusception on defecography was common. Patients with fecal incontinence with concurrent constipation had less severe incontinence scores at presentation (21.0 vs 23.8; p < 0.001) and yet lower overall health satisfaction (28.9% vs 42.5%; p < 0.001). Quality-of-life scores declined as constipation severity increased for lifestyle, coping, depression, and embarrassment.
This was a single-institution study, and surgeon preference could bias population and anorectal physiology testing.
Patients with fecal incontinence with concurrent constipation represent a different disease phenotype and have different clinical and anorectal physiology test findings and worse overall quality of life. Treatment of these patients requires careful consideration of prolapse pathology with coordinated treatment of coexisting disorders. See Video Abstract at http://links.lww.com/DCR/A783.
许多患有粪便失禁的患者同时伴有便秘。这部分患者尚未得到充分的描述和了解。
本研究旨在报告粪便失禁伴发便秘的频率,并比较伴有和不伴有便秘的粪便失禁患者的生活质量结果。
这是一项前瞻性队列研究。收集粪便失禁严重程度指数、便秘严重程度量表、粪便失禁生活质量调查(分为生活方式、应对、抑郁和尴尬)、盆腔器官脱垂 Inventory 和尿失禁 Inventory 调查以及肛肠生理学测试等调查数据。
该研究于 2007 年 1 月至 2017 年 1 月在一家三级盆底中心进行。
研究患者因粪便失禁就诊于三级盆底中心。
生活质量调查结果。
共确定了 946 例粪便失禁患者,其中 656 例(69.3%)伴有同时存在的便秘。与单纯粪便失禁患者相比,伴有便秘的粪便失禁患者更不可能报告妊娠史(89.2% vs 91.4%;p=0.001)或复杂分娩史,如需要器械辅助分娩(9.1% vs 18.1%;p=0.005)。伴有便秘的粪便失禁患者同时存在盆腔器官脱垂的比例更高(盆腔器官脱垂 Inventory:18.4% vs 8.2%;p<0.01)、同时存在尿失禁的比例更高(尿失禁 Inventory:30.2% vs 23.4%;p=0.01),且肛肠测压时压力更高;排粪造影检查时肠套叠常见。伴有便秘的粪便失禁患者就诊时失禁评分较低(21.0 分 vs 23.8 分;p<0.001),整体健康满意度较低(28.9% vs 42.5%;p<0.001)。随着便秘严重程度的增加,生活方式、应对、抑郁和尴尬的生活质量评分均下降。
这是一项单中心研究,外科医生的偏好可能会影响人群和肛肠生理学检查。
伴有便秘的粪便失禁患者代表了一种不同的疾病表型,他们具有不同的临床和肛肠生理学检查结果,整体生活质量更差。治疗这些患者需要仔细考虑脱垂病理,并协调治疗并存疾病。