| Literature DB >> 27071997 |
Konstantinos Kamperis1, Charlotte Van Herzeele2, Soren Rittig3,4, Johan Vande Walle5.
Abstract
Most patients with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis can be effectively treated with an enuresis alarm or antidiuretic therapy (desmopressin), depending on the pathophysiology of the condition in the individual patient. Desmopressin is first-line therapy for enuresis caused by nocturnal polyuria, an excessive urine output during the night. However, in a recent study, around one-third of patients thought to be resistant to desmopressin were subsequently treated effectively with desmopressin monotherapy in a specialist centre. The aim of this article is to review best practice in selecting patients for desmopressin treatment, as well as outline eight recommendations for maximizing the chances of treatment success in patients receiving desmopressin. The roles of formulation, dose, timing of administration, food and fluid intake, inter-individual variation in response, body weight, adherence, withdrawal strategies and combination therapies are discussed in light of the most recent research on desmopressin and enuresis. Possible reasons for suboptimal treatment response are explored and strategies to improve outcomes in patients for whom desmopressin is an appropriate therapy are presented. Through optimization of the treatment plan in primary and specialist care centres, the hope is that fewer patients with this distressing and often embarrassing condition will experience unnecessary delays in receiving appropriate care and achieving improvements.Entities:
Keywords: Best practices; Desmopressin; Nocturnal enuresis; Treatment outcome; Treatment resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27071997 PMCID: PMC5203827 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-016-3376-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Nocturnal polyuria and maximum voided volume status of children included in the DRIP studya
| Nocturnal polyuria | Normal or high maximum voided volume | Low maximum voided volumeb
|
|---|---|---|
| Nocturnal polyuriac
| 3.16 % | 9.63 % |
| No nocturnal polyuria | 6.98 % | 80.23 % |
aDRIP [Desmopressin Response in PNE (primary nocturnal enuresis)] study (Lottmann et al. [22])
bLow maximum voided volume defined using cut-off proposed by Hjälmås [28]
cNocturnal polyuria (NP) is defined using cutoff proposed by Rittig et al. [7]
First-line treatment choice based on nocturnal polyuria and maximum voided volume status
| Presentation | Recommended first-line treatment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| NP on wet nights | Low MVV | Desmopressin | Alarm |
| ✓ | x | ✓ | |
| x | ✓ | ✓ | |
| x | x | ✓ or | ✓ |
| ✓ | ✓ | ✓ and | ✓ |
MVV, Maximum voided volume
Summary of important considerations to take into account for treatment success with desmopressin
| Consideration | Description or recommended action |
|---|---|
| Does patient have monosymptomatic NE? | History taking, frequency–volume chart (daytime symptoms, low MVV?) |
| Does patient have NP? | Diagnosed using bedwetting diary |
| Is the most appropriate formulation of desmopressin being prescribed? | Usually oral lyophilisate (higher bioavailability, predictability, less food interaction) |
| Timing of desmopressin administration | Ideally to be taken 1 h before bedtime and 2 h after food; oral lyophilisate should be used if shorter interval due to reduced food interaction. |
| Fluid intake | Limit fluid intake from 1 h before to 8 h after administration |
| Desmopressin dose—is duration of action sufficient? | Inter-individual variation in desmopressin response means dose adjustment often required (Fig. |
| Body weight | Body weight may influence required dose with oral lyophilisate |
| Is patient adherent? | Adherence to treatment and administration recommendations is crucial but often suboptimal |
| Does patient want to stop treatment? | Structured/tapered withdrawal may be tried to avoid relapse |
| Combination therapy | Additional therapies may help in desmopressin-resistant patients or those with partial response |
NE nocturnal enuresis; NP nocturnal polyuria; MVV maximum voided volume
Fig. 1Dosing with desmopressin oral lyophilisate
Combination therapy options with desmopressin
| Desmopressin plus: | For patients with: |
|---|---|
| Enuresis alarm | NP and small nocturnal MVV (Kamperis et al. [ |
| Anticholinergic | NP and small MVV due to detrusor overactivity during sleep |
| Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug | NP and high prostaglandin levels (Kamperis et al. [ |
| Diuretics during daytime | NP and abnormal circadian rhythm of renal tubular sodium handling (De Guchtenaere et al. [ |
NP nocturnal polyuria; MVV maximum voided volume