Symptomatic Treatment of Pain-Related Pediatric Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders in a Biopsychosocial Construct, and a Validity Study of Rome III Criteria

Shailender Madani, Rohit Madani, Suchi Parikh, Ahila Manivannan, Wilma R. Orellana, Ron Thomas, Carlo Di Lorenzo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Our study aims to assess improvement with symptomatic treatment of pain-related functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) in a biopsychosocial construct and evaluate validity of Rome III criteria. Children with chronic abdominal pain diagnosed with an FGID or organic disease were followed for 1 year: 256/334 were diagnosed with an FGID and 78/334 were diagnosed with a possible organic disease due to alarm signs or not meeting Rome III criteria. After 1 year, 251 had true FGID and 46 had organic diseases. Ninety percent of FGID patients improved with symptomatic treatment over an average of 5.4 months. With a 95% confidence interval, Rome criteria predicted FGIDs with sensitivity 0.89, specificity 0.90, positive predictive value 0.98, and negative predictive value 0.59. We conclude that symptomatic treatment of pain-related FGIDs results in clinical improvement and could reduce invasive/expensive testing. Rome III criteria’s high specificity and positive predictive value suggest they can rule in a diagnosis of FGID.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)304-313
Number of pages10
JournalClinical Pediatrics
Volume60
Issue number6-7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2021

Keywords

  • Rome criteria
  • abdominal pain
  • biopsychosocial model
  • children

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