AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates gender differences in the assessment of inflammatory low back pain (IBP) as it relates to diagnosing axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) compared to other causes of chronic low back pain (LBP).
  • Patients under 45 with chronic LBP were analyzed using specific criteria for axSpA to evaluate the effectiveness of various IBP assessment items across genders.
  • Results showed that while IBP assessment items and criteria performed similarly for both men and women, women exhibited slightly better results, indicating that gender might slightly influence the diagnostic effectiveness of the criteria sets used.

Article Abstract

Background/purpose: Inflammatory low back pain (IBP) is the leading symptom in axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) and its assessment is crucial for the diagnosis. Our aim was to assess gender specific differences in the discriminative ability of the items and criteria sets in a specific patient population consisting patients with axSpA and other causes of chronic low back pain (LBP).

Methods: Patients with chronic LBP with an onset less than 45 years were included and screened for the Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) axSpA criteria. Items of IBP, according to Calin, Berlin and ASAS expert criteria were evaluated in patients with axSpA and non-SpA LBP by a blinded researcher. Discriminative ability of the single items and sets were assessed in terms of sensitivity, specificity and area under the curve (AUC) analysis in male and female patients and compared between genders.

Results: Single IBP items performed similarly well in men and women, as well as criteria sets. Despite similar discriminative performance of IBP items and criteria sets in both genders, women tend to have slightly better performance. Our results revealed similar sensitivity but slightly lower specificity for most of the single items and criteria sets compared to previous reports.

Conclusion: Gender may have an influence on the discriminative performance of some of the IBP items and criteria sets as well. Calin criteria seem to perform slightly better in both genders than Berlin and ASAS criteria sets.

Key Words: Inflammatory, back pain, gender, axial spondyloarthritis.

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