4.4 Article

Gastrointestinal-Specific symptom anxiety in patients with gastroparesis: Relationships to symptom severity and quality of life

Journal

NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nmo.14534

Keywords

brain-gut axis; gastrointestinal motility; gastroparesis; psychological distress; somatization

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This study aimed to validate a measure of gastrointestinal-specific anxiety in patients with gastroparesis and evaluate the relationship between gastrointestinal-specific anxiety and symptom severity and quality of life. The results showed that higher gastrointestinal-specific anxiety was associated with increased symptom severity and decreased mental health-related quality of life.
BackgroundGastrointestinal (GI)-specific anxiety has been identified as a treatment target in irritable bowel syndrome. However, GI-specific anxiety has been understudied in other GI functional/motility disorders. Among adults with gastroparesis, we aimed to: (1) initially validate a measure of GI-specific anxiety, the Visceral Sensitivity Index (VSI); and (2) evaluate the relationship between GI-specific anxiety and gastroparesis symptom severity and quality of life, compared to measures of anxiety, depression, and somatization. MethodsConsecutive adult patients (N = 100) with gastroparesis presenting for initial consultation completed a series of self-report measures including the VSI. We conducted a confirmatory factor analysis of the VSI one-factor structure and tested internal consistency and convergent validity. We then performed hierarchical linear regression analyses to explore associations between VSI and gastroparesis symptom severity and overall quality of life. Key ResultsConfirmatory factor analysis revealed that the original VSI one-factor structure overall fit well [chi(2)(90) = 220.1, p < 0.0001; SRMR = 0.08; RMSEA = 0.12; CFI = 0.96]. The VSI also had excellent internal consistency (alpha = 0.99) and convergent validity (r = 0.29-0.56; all p < 0.01). Higher GI-specific anxiety was significantly associated with greater gastroparesis symptom severity, including nausea/vomiting, fullness/satiety, and upper abdominal pain scores beyond depression, anxiety, or somatization (all p = <0.01-0.01). Additionally, higher GI-specific anxiety was significantly associated with lower mental health-related quality of life, beyond gastroparesis symptom severity, depression, anxiety, or somatization (p = 0.01). Conclusions & InferencesThe VSI is an adequate measure of GI-specific anxiety in patients with gastroparesis. Higher GI-specific anxiety was associated with increased patient-reported gastroparesis symptom severity and decreased quality of life, beyond depression/anxiety.

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