| Literature DB >> 28274109 |
Max J Schmulson1, Douglas A Drossman2,3.
Abstract
Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) are diagnosed and classified using the Rome criteria; the criteria may change over time as new scientific data emerge. The Rome IV was released in May 2016. The aim is to review the main changes in Rome IV. FGIDs are now called disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBI). Rome IV has a multicultural rather than a Western-culture focus. There are new chapters including multicultural, age-gender-women's health, intestinal microenvironment, biopsychosocial, and centrally mediated disorders. New disorders have been included although not truly FGIDs, but fit the new definition of DGBI including opioid-induced gastrointestinal hyperalgesia , opioid-induced constipation , and cannabinoid hyperemesis . Also, new FGIDs based on available evidence including reflux hypersensitivity and centrally mediated abdominal pain syndrome . Using a normative survey to determine the frequency of normal bowel symptoms in the general population changes in the time frame for diagnosis were introduced. For irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) only pain is required and discomfort was eliminated because it is non-specific, having different meanings in different languages. Pain is now related to bowel movements rather than just improving with bowel movements (ie, can get worse with bowel movement). Functional bowel disorders (functional diarrhea , functional constipation , IBS with predominant diarrhea [IBS-D], IBS with predominant constipation [IBS-C ], and IBS with mixed bowel habits ) are considered to be on a continuum rather than as independent entities. Clinical applications such as diagnostic algorithms and the Multidimensional Clinical Profile have been updated. The new Rome IV iteration is evidence-based, multicultural oriented and with clinical applications. As new evidence become available, future updates are expected.Entities:
Keywords: Constipation; Diarrhea; Functional gastrointestinal disorders; Irritable bowel syndrome; Rome IV
Year: 2017 PMID: 28274109 PMCID: PMC5383110 DOI: 10.5056/jnm16214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurogastroenterol Motil ISSN: 2093-0879 Impact factor: 4.924
The Rome IV Process
| Years | Level | Actions |
|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Rome Foundation Board of Directors | Identified key areas to acquire preliminary knowledge for the Rome IV Chapter Committeest |
| 2010–2012 | Rome Foundation Board of Directors | Creation of the Rome IV Editorial Board Members |
| Rome IV Editorial Board Members | Identified Chairs and Co-chairs of the 18 committees | |
| Rome IV Committees Chairs and Co-chairs | Selection of committee members to produce Rome IV Chapters | |
| Rome Foundation Board of Directors | Creation of Support Committees to provide ancillary service to the chapter committees | |
| 2013 (May) | Rome Foundation Board of Directors | Orientation meeting |
| Support Committees | Presented their work | |
| 2013–2015 | Rome IV Committees | Critically synthesized the literature and created the requested documents through several revisions. |
| 2014 (December) | Rome IV Committees | Meeting in Rome (Rome IV Conference) to revise the documents and established consensus on scientific content an diagnostic criteria |
| Rome IV Editorial Board, Committee Chairs and Co-Chairs | Harmonization meeting to summarize and present their committees' recommendation to the group | |
| 2015 | Committee Chairs and Co-Chairs | Each document was sent out for peer-review by international experts |
| 2015 (Autumn) | Committee Chairs and Co-Chairs and Members | Manuscripts for the Rome IV Gastroenterology supplements were created |
| Rome IV Editorial Board | Reviewed the manuscripts for the Rome IV Gastroenterology supplements | |
| Rome IV Committee Members | Signed off on all documents before they were sent to copy editor for final check |
Figure 1Frequency of reporting of pain or burning above the belly button in the normative survey. The histograms show the frequency of reporting in different time frames for men, women and the combined sample. The vertical dotted line shows the 90th percentile for the combined sample of females and males. MT shows the minimum threshold in males and FT shows the minimum 90th percentile in females. Accordingly, a threshold of only 2–3 days a month would limit misclassification to 10% in females, whereas a threshold of 1 day/ month would limit misclassification to 10% in males. Reproduced with permission from Rome Foundation, Inc.
Rome IV Classification of the Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders–Disorders of Gut-Brain Interaction
| A. Esophageal disorders | |
|---|---|
| A1. Functional chest pain | A4. Globus |
| A2. Functional heartburn | A5. Functional dysphagia |
| A3. Reflux hypersensitivity | |
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| B. Gastroduodenal disorders | |
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| B1. Functional dyspepsia | B3. Nausea and vomiting disorders |
| B1a. Postprandial distress syndrome | B3a. Chronic nausea vomiting syndrome |
| B1b. Epigastric pain syndrome | B3b. Cyclic vomiting syndrome |
| B2. Belching disorders | B3c. Cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome |
| B2a. Excessive supragastric belching | B4. Rumination syndrome |
| B2b. Excessive gastric belching | |
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| C. Bowel disorders | |
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| C1. Irritable bowel syndrome | C2. Functional constipation |
| IBS with predominant constipation | C3. Functional diarrhea |
| IBS with predominant diarrhea | C4. Functional abdominal bloating/distension |
| IBS with mixed bowel habits | C5. Unspecified functional bowel disorder |
| IBS unclassified | C6. Opioid-induced constipation |
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| D. Centrally mediated disorders of gastrointestinal pain | |
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| D1. Centrally mediated abdominal pain syndrome | D2. Narcotic bowel syndrome/opioid-induced gastrointestinal hyperalgesia |
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| E. Gallbladder and sphincter of Oddi disorders | |
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| E1. Biliary pain | E2. Functional pancreatic sphincter of Oddi disorder |
| E1a. Functional gallbladder disorder | |
| E1b. Functional biliary Sphincter of Oddi disorder | |
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| F. Anorectal disorders | |
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| F1. Fecal incontinence | F3. Functional defecation disorders |
| F2. Functional anorectal pain | F3a. Inadequate defecatory propulsion |
| F2a. Levator ani syndrome | F3b. Dyssynergic defecation |
| F2b. Unspecified functional anorectal pain | |
| F2c. Proctalgia fugax | |
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| G. Childhood functional gastrointestinal disorders: neonate/toddler | |
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| G1. Infant regurgitation | G5. Functional diarrhea |
| G2. Rumination syndrome | G6. Infant dyschezia |
| G3. Cyclic vomiting syndrome | G7. Functional constipation |
| G4. Infant colic | |
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| H. Childhood functional gastrointestinal disorders: child/adolescent | |
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| H1. Functional nausea and vomiting disorders | H2. Functional abdominal pain disorders |
| H1a. Cyclic vomiting syndrome | H2a. Functional dyspepsia |
| H1b. Functional nausea and functional vomiting | H2a1. Postprandial distress syndrome |
| H1b1. Functional nausea | H2a2. Epigastric pain syndrome |
| H1b2. Functional vomiting disorders | H2b. Irritable bowel syndrome |
| H1c. Rumination syndrome | H2c. Abdominal migraine |
| H1d. Aerophagia | H2d. Functional abdominal pain - not otherwise specified |
| H3. Functional defecation | |
| H3a. Functional constipation | |
| H3b. Non-retentive fecal incontinence | |
Figure 2Different models to explain functional bowel/disorders of gut-brain interaction. (A) Rome I considered the functional bowel disorders as different and independent entities. (B) Later, Rome II-Rome III recognized that these disorders could overlap between the different functional bowel disorders. (C) Rome IV now considers that bowel disorders exist on a continuum rather than independent disorders. Adapted and reproduced from Whorwell et al35 with permission from Rome Foundation, Inc. IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; FC, functional constipation; FDr, functional diarrhea; C, constipation; D, diarrhea; M, mixed.
Figure 3Changes in diagnostic criteria for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) from Rome III to Rome IV. In Rome IV abdominal ‘discomfort’ has been deleted from the definition because of the imprecise nature of the term together with the fact that ‘discomfort’ is not present in every language; abdominal pain should be present at least 1 day a week on average during the preceding 3 months; ‘Improvement with’ defecation has been changed to ‘Related to’ defecation as in a subgroup of patients it may increase or remain without changes; and ‘Onset’ has been deleted from the associated changes in frequency and change in form (appearance) of stools. Adapted from Longstreth GF et al53 and Mearin F et al.49
Rome IV Irritable Bowel Syndrome-Subtypes Criteria
| IBS Subtype | Criteria |
|---|---|
| IBS-C | More than one-fourth (25%) of bowel movements with Bristol Stool Scale Types 1–2 and less than one-fourth (25%) with Types 6–7. |
| IBS-D | More than one-fourth (25%) of bowel movements with Bristol Stool Scale Types 6–7 and less than one-fourth (25%) with Types 1–2. |
| IBS-M | More than one-fourth (25%) of bowel movements with Bristol Stool Scale Types 1–2 and more than one-fourth (25%) with Types 6–7. |
| IBS-U | Patients meet diagnostic criteria for IBS but their bowel habits cannot be accurately categorized in any of the above subtypes. |
IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; IBS-C, IBS with predominant constipation; IBS-D, IBS with predominant diarrhea; IBS-M, IBS with mixed bowel habits; IBS-U, unclassified IBS.
The Multidimensional Clinical Profile Categories
| Categories | Examples |
|---|---|
| A. Categorical diagnosis based on Rome IV criteria | |
| B. Clinical modifiers | Bowel habit predominance (ie, IBS-D, IBS-C, IBS-M), post-infection (PI), gluten sensitivity, FODMAPs sensitivity |
| C. Severity impact by self-perception | Mild, moderate, severe |
| D. Psychosocial modifiers and comorbidities | Can be categorical (eg, DSM Axis I), dimensional (eg, HADS, psychosocial red flags), or patient reported (eg, abuse) |
| E. Physiological modifiers and biomarkers of clinical relevance that enhance understanding of the diagnosis | eg, motility, biochemical, antibodies |
IBS-C, IBS with predominant constipation; IBS-D, IBS with predominant diarrhea; IBS-M, IBS with mixed bowel habits; FODMAPs, fermentable oligo-, di-, monosaccharides, and polyols; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.