Chamara Basnayake, the author of the article, comments:
The letter highlights the common diagnostic dilemmas in irritable bowel syndrome. As the paper focused on treatment, the nuances and controversies surrounding diagnosis were not detailed.
The diagnosis is made on the basis of symptoms obtained from the patient’s history, as described by the Rome criteria, in the absence of red flags. When the symptoms are unclear, or there is an obvious red flag in the history, further testing is recommended.
Diagnostic testing is not required to rule red flags in or out. Box 2 of the article was titled ‘Red flags that require further testing or specialist assessment’. It does not include conditions that require ruling out in order to diagnose irritable bowel syndrome. Red flags prompt the doctor to investigate the potential for alternative, more sinister diagnoses.
Faecal occult blood testing has been proven exclusively for screening populations to improve the early detection of colorectal cancer. It is not helpful as a diagnostic tool in people with symptoms. A false-negative faecal occult blood result in symptomatic individuals may inappropriately reassure doctors not to proceed with further investigations.2
It is true that there are many similarities in the symptoms of organic and functional gastrointestinal disorders. There is no unique symptom that positively diagnoses irritable bowel syndrome. Similarly, chest pain is not solely a symptom of ischaemic heart disease. An appropriate history should include an assessment of risk factors for organic gastrointestinal conditions, including a family history of gastrointestinal malignancies, or coeliac disease. The use of non-invasive testing is at the discretion of the doctor assessing a patient. If a red flag is identified on non-invasive testing, endoscopies should be arranged.