Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 2021
How dyspepsia, gastroesophageal reflux symptoms, and overlapping symptoms affect quality of life, use of health care, and medication - a long-term population based cohort study
Abstract
Abstract Background and aim The prevalence of gastroesophageal reflux symptoms (GERS) and dyspepsia is high. Overlapping of GERS and dyspepsia has been described to affect quality of life. However, studies are few. This long-term population-based study evaluates how GERS, dyspepsia, and overlapping symptoms, affect quality of life, and the use of health care and medication. Methods This study presents data for the control group of the randomised population study, HEP-FYN. At baseline 10,000 individuals, aged 40–65\u2009years, received questionnaires at baseline and after 1, 5 and 13\u2009years. The questionnaire included questions regarding demographics, use of health care resources, gastrointestinal symptoms (the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS)), and the Short-Form 36-Item Health Survey (SF-36) to assess quality of life. Results Complete data was available for 4.403 individuals at 13-year follow-up. Of these 13.6% reported GERS only, 11.6% dyspepsia only, and 27.1% overlapping symptoms during follow-up. Individuals reporting overlapping symptoms had compared to individuals reporting GERS only or dyspepsia only more visits at general practitioner (last year:16.7% vs. 8.5% vs. 12.3%), more sick leave days (last month: 4.3% vs. 2.9% vs 0.7%), used more ulcer drugs (last month: 30.5% vs 16.4% vs 9.4%). In addition, individuals with overlapping symptoms reported a lower quality of life in all eight dimensions of SF-36 compared to individuals with GERS alone or dyspepsia alone. Conclusions Overlapping symptoms was associated with lower quality of life scores and substantial use of health-care resources. Having solely GERS affected quality of life and health care use least.