Pain is a cardinal symptom cutting across Rome IV anatomical categories in disorders of gut‐brain interaction: A network‐based approach

Author:

Burton‐Murray Helen123ORCID,Guadagnoli Livia4ORCID,Vanzhula Irina A.5,Brown Tiffany A.6,Sperber Ami D.7ORCID,Palsson Olafur8,Bangdiwala Shrikant I.910ORCID,Van Oudenhove Lukas4111213,Staller Kyle23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Medicine Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Laboratory for Brain‐Gut Axis Studies (LaBGAS), Translational Research in Gastrointestinal Disorders (TARGID), Department of Chronic Diseases and Metabolism (CHROMETA) KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

5. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences University of Louisville Louisville Kentucky USA

6. Department of Psychological Sciences Auburn University Auburn Alabama USA

7. Faculty of Health Sciences Ben‐Gurion University of the Negev Beer‐Sheva Israel

8. Center for Functional GI & Motility Disorders University of North Carolina‐Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

9. Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

10. Population Health Research Institute McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

11. Leuven Brain Institute KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

12. Consultation‐Liaison Psychiatry University Psychiatric Centre KU Leuven, Campus Gasthuisberg Leuven Belgium

13. Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Lab, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences Dartmouth College Hanover New Hampshire USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionDisorders of gut‐brain interaction (DGBI) are symptom‐based disorders categorized by anatomic location but have high overlap and heterogeneity. Viewing DGBI symptoms on a spectrum (i.e. dimensionally) rather than categorically may better inform interventions to accommodate complex clinical presentations. We aimed to evaluate symptom networks to identify how DGBI symptoms interact.MethodsWe used the Rome IV Diagnostic Questionnaire continuously/ordinally scored items collected from the Rome Foundation Global Epidemiology Study. We excluded participants who reported ≥1 organic/structural gastrointestinal disorder(s). We sought to (1) identify core symptoms in the DGBI symptom networks, (2) identify bridge pathways between Rome IV diagnostic categories (esophageal, bowel, gastroduodenal, anorectal), and (3) explore how symptoms group together into communities.ResultsOf 54,127 adults, 20,229 met criteria for at least one DGBI (age mean = 42.2 ± 15.5; 57% female). General abdominal pain and epigastric pain were the core symptoms in the DGBI symptom network (i.e., had the strongest connections to other symptoms). Pain symptoms emerged as bridge pathways across existing DGBI diagnostic anatomic location (i.e., abdominal pain connected to chest pain, epigastric pain, rectal pain). Without a priori category definitions, exploratory network community analysis showed that symptoms grouped together into “pain,” “gastroduodenal,” and “constipation,” rather than into groups by anatomic location.ConclusionOur findings suggest pain symptoms are central and serve as a key connection to other symptoms, crosscutting anatomic location. Future longitudinal research is needed to test symptom network relations longitudinally and investigate whether targeting pain symptoms (rather than anatomic‐ or disorder‐specific symptoms) has clinical impact.

Publisher

Wiley

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