AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to identify the symptom domains of ulcerative colitis that frequently occur during disease flare-ups, improve with effective treatment, and resolve during remission.
  • Thirteen out of twenty-eight symptom domains were found to be both common during flares and responsive to changes in disease activity, with notable new symptoms identified through patient input.
  • The findings suggest that many symptoms significant to patients are missing from standard indices, indicating a need for new survey measures to enhance the assessment of disease activity in ulcerative colitis.

Article Abstract

Background: Ulcerative colitis disease activity is determined by measuring symptoms and signs. Our aim was to determine which symptom domains are frequent and responsive to change in the evaluation of disease activity, which are those defined by three criteria: 1) they occur frequently during flares; 2) they improve during effective therapy for ulcerative colitis; and 3) they resolve during remission.

Methods: Twenty-eight symptom domains, 16 from standard indices and 12 novel domains identified by ulcerative colitis patient focus groups, were evaluated. Sixty subjects with ulcerative colitis were surveyed, rating each symptom on the three criteria with a 100 mm Visual Analogue Scale. Frequent and responsive symptoms were defined a priori as those whose median Visual Analogue Scale rating for all 3 criteria was significantly greater than 50.

Results: Thirteen of the 28 symptom domains were identified as both frequent in ulcerative colitis flares and responsive to changes in disease activity. Seven of these 13 symptom domains were novel symptoms derived from ulcerative colitis patient focus groups including stool mucus, tenesmus, fatigue, rapid postprandial bowel movements, and inability to differentiate liquid or gas from solid stool when rectal urgency occurs. Ten of the 16 symptom domains from standard indices were either infrequent or unresponsive to changes in disease activity.

Conclusion: Only some of the symptoms of ulcerative colitis that are important to patients are included in standard indices, and several symptoms currently measured are not frequent or responsive to change in ulcerative colitis patients. Development of survey measures of these symptom domains could significantly improve the assessment of disease activity in ulcerative colitis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2559827PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-6-69DOI Listing

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