BMC Public Health

official impact factor 2.36

Open Access Research article

Validation and results of a questionnaire for functional bowel disease in out-patients

Ioannis A Mouzas1*, Nikolaos Fragkiadakis1, Joanna Moschandreas2, Andreas Karachristos1, Panagiotis Skordilis1, E Kouroumalis1 and Orestes N Manousos1

Author Affiliations

1 Gastroenterology Department, University Hospital, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece

2 Biostatistics Laboratory, Department of Social Medicine, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece

For all author emails, please log on.

BMC Public Health 2002, 2:8 doi:10.1186/1471-2458-2-8

Published: 21 May 2002

Abstract

Background

The aim was to evaluate and validate a bowel disease questionnaire in patients attending an out-patient gastroenterology clinic in Greece.

Methods

This was a prospective study. Diagnosis was based on detailed clinical and laboratory evaluation. The questionnaire was tested on a pilot group of patients. Interviewer-administration technique was used. One-hundred-and-forty consecutive patients attending the out-patient clinic for the first time and fifty healthy controls selected randomly participated in the study. Reliability (kappa statistics) and validity of the questionnaire were tested. We used logistic regression models and binary recursive partitioning for assessing distinguishing ability among irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), functional dyspepsia and organic disease patients.

Results

Mean time for questionnaire completion was 18 min. In test-retest procedure a good agreement was obtained (kappa statistics 0.82). There were 55 patients diagnosed as having IBS, 18 with functional dyspepsia (Rome I criteria), 38 with organic disease. Location of pain was a significant distinguishing factor, patients with functional dyspepsia having no lower abdominal pain (p < 0.001). Significant factors distinguishing between IBS and functional dyspepsia were relief of pain by either antacids or defecation (19% vs 71% and 66% vs 0% respectively). Awakening from pain at night was also a factor distinguishing between IBS and organic disease groups (26% vs 61%, p < 0.01).

Conclusions

This questionnaire for functional bowel disease is a valid and reliable instrument that can distinguish satisfactorily between organic and functional disease in an out-patient setting.