Validation of a gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GERD) specific screening instrument for epidemiological purposes

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Date

2006

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Sri Lanka Medical Association

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The prevalence of GERD is increasing worldwide; its community prevalence in Sri Lanka is unknown. AIMS: To develop a clinical score to screen for GERD in the community and assess whether a score using both symptom frequency and severity correlates better to an objective measure of GERD than one using only symptom frequency. METHODOLOGY: 58 GERD patients (endoscopy positive) and 60 controls (matched for age and gender) were given a GERD-specific interviewer-administered questionnaire assessing seven upper gastrointestinal symptoms. Each symptom was graded using Likert scales for frequency (4-items) and severity (5-items), and two scores were generated. Score 1 was the sum of frequency of symptoms while score 2 was the sum of products of frequency and severity of each symptom. The patients then underwent oesophageal manometry and 24h pHmetry. Cut-off values were determined by constructing receiver-operating characteristic curves. RESULTS: For both scoring systems, mean scores of cases were significantly higher than controls (p=0.000). The cut-off for score 1 was > 11.50 (sensitivity 91.4%, specificity 85%, positive and negative predictive values 83.29% and 92.34%). The cut-off for score 2 was > 12.50 (sensitivity 96.6%, specificity 80%, positive and negative predictive values 81.06% and 92.32%). Both scores showed high reproducibility (intra class correlation coefficient scorel=0.94 and score 2=0.82). There was good correlation between both scores and 24-h pH parameters (Spearman rank correlation, p=0.01), but score 2 was significantly better. CONCLUSION: Our GERD questionnaire is valid, reproducible and showed better correlation with an objective test when both severity and frequency of symptoms were scored rather than frequency alone.

Description

Oral Presentation Abstract (OP29), 119th Annual Scientific Sessions, Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2006 Colombo, Sri Lanka

Keywords

Gastroesophageal Reflux, Validation Studies

Citation

The Ceylon Medical Journal. 2006; 50(Supplement 1):21

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