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Rome III and IV criteria are less discordant to diagnose irritable bowel syndrome in clinic patients than in community subjects. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rome IV criteria for IBS are less sensitive than Rome III but identify more severe cases, which can influence how often patients seek medical help.
  • A study compared the diagnosis and symptom severity of IBS in clinic patients using both Rome III and IV criteria, revealing that fewer patients showed discordance between the two criteria in the clinic compared to earlier community data from India.
  • Patients meeting either Rome III or Rome IV criteria in the clinic reported more severe IBS symptoms, particularly regarding pain, compared to those who only met the Rome III criteria.

Article Abstract

Background: Though Rome IV criteria for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) are less sensitive; they select Rome III patients with greater severity and consultation behavior. Since severity of IBS may determine consultation behavior, we compared Rome III and IV criteria in clinic patients and compared with earlier published data from Indian community hypothesizing that the diagnostic discordance between these criteria would be less in clinic than in community.

Methods: Tertiary clinic patients were screened for IBS using Hindi translated-validated Rome III and IV questionnaires; IBS symptom severity scores (IBS-SSS) was also assessed. Diagnostic discordance between Rome III and IV criteria for IBS was compared with earlier published Indian community data.

Results: Of 110 clinic patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders, 72 met IBS criteria (47 [42.7%], 22 [20%] and three [2.7%] both Rome III and IV criteria, Rome III criteria only and Rome IV criteria only, respectively). In contrast, of 40 IBS subjects from Indian community published earlier, nine (22.5%), 28 (70%) and three (7.5%) fulfilled both Rome III and IV, Rome III only, Rome IV only criteria, respectively. Clinic patients with IBS fulfilling both Rome III and IV criteria or Rome IV criteria had higher IBS-SSS than those fulfilling Rome III criteria only (295.3 ± 80.7 vs. 205.6 ± 65.7; p < 0.00001). This difference was primarily related to pain severity and number of days with pain.

Conclusion: Discordance between Rome IV and Rome III criteria in tertiary care clinic patients is less than in community subjects with IBS in India.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12664-024-01611-4DOI Listing

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