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Gastrointestinal symptom-specific anxiety is associated with disability in inflammatory bowel diseases independent of general anxiety and self-reported disease activity: evidence from a large cross-sectional patient study.

Created on 20 Jun 2026

Authors

Sarah Van den Borren, Livia Guadagnoli, Anouk Teugels, Ilse van den Eijnden, Bep Keersmaekers, Marc Ferrante, Ilse Van Diest

Published in

Journal of Crohn's & colitis. Volume 20. Issue 6. Jun 07, 2026.

Abstract

Gastrointestinal symptom-specific anxiety (GSA) is increasingly recognized as an important construct in the disease experience of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). However, it remains unclear to what extent GSA overlaps with general anxiety in the IBD population, and whether it is associated with disability beyond general anxiety and other clinical and demographic variables.
First, we examined how many patients with elevated GSA do or do not experience general anxiety, and vice versa. Second, we assessed the unique contribution of GSA to variance in IBD-related disability, keeping general anxiety, disease activity, and other variables constant.
In a cross-sectional survey study, over 1000 IBD patients completed questionnaires on general anxiety (the anxiety subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [HADS]), GSA (the Visceral Sensitivity Index [VSI]), IBD-related disability (the IBD Disk), and self-reported clinical disease activity (Patient-Reported Outcomes [PRO] and Manitoba IBD Index [MIBDI]) alongside a set of general demographic and clinical questions.
GSA and general anxiety frequently co-occurred, but 38.0% of patients reported GSA without general anxiety. Additionally, GSA was significantly associated with IBD-related disability (P < .001) even when general anxiety, disease activity, and other variables were controlled for. Although general anxiety showed the strongest association with disability (β = .27), the association for GSA (β = 0.22) was stronger than for clinical disease activity (β = .18) and other demographic and clinical variables.
Overall, this highlights the clinical significance of GSA beyond general anxiety and disease activity in IBD.

PMID:
42319973
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 20 Jun 2026.

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