| Literature DB >> 27846839 |
Qinyu Liu1, Banghua Liao1, Ruochen Zhang1, Tao Jin1, Liang Zhou1, Deyi Luo1, Jiaming Liu1, Hong Li1, Kunjie Wang2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Controversy remains on the superiority of combination therapy over monotherapy on ureteral stent-related symptoms (SRSs). We tend to explore if there is a necessity of combination therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenergic alpha-1 receptor antagonists; Medication therapy management; Muscarinic antagonists; Stent-related symptoms
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27846839 PMCID: PMC5111197 DOI: 10.1186/s12894-016-0186-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the current study
Popularity characteristic of the current study
| Variables | Group c | Group s | Group t | Group s+t |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of cases | 28 | 26 | 22 | 24 |
| Gender, n (%) | ||||
| Male | 20 (71.4) | 20 (76.9) | 12 (54.5) | 18 (75.0) |
| Female | 8 (28.6) | 6 (23.1) | 10 (45.5) | 6 (25.0) |
| Age (year), mean ± SD | 40.00 ± 8.24 | 41.55 ± 10.63 | 43.1 ± 12.10 | 44.00 ± 12.16 |
| Height (cm), mean ± SD | 165.75 ± 7.92 | 167.67 ± 6.05 | 165.30 ± 8.03 | 162.44 ± 5.42 |
| Weight (kg), mean ± SD | 67.08 ± 12.33 | 64.83 ± 10.80 | 67.10 ± 14.71 | 63.00 ± 11.24 |
P < 0.05 for age, height, weight and gender among the 4 groups
Fig. 2Means of total scores of all symptoms in control group on each follow-up day. The means changed statistically over time (p < 0.001) and decreased obviously in the first 4 days (p = 0.017). However, from then on no significant differences showed from day4 to day14 showed (p = 0.602)
Fig. 3Solifenacin, tamsulosin and combination therapy all released SRSs comparing to the control group (p = 0.004 vs 0.026 vs <0.001). Combination therapy could release the SRSs much faster than solifenacin (p = 0.016) or tamsulosin (0.002) in the first 4 days. No significant differences showed up between combination and solifenacin (p = 0.842) or tamsulosin (p = 0.774) alone from day5 to day14. Solifenacin and tamsulosin showed comparable effect throughout the whole follow up (p = 0.582)
Fig. 4Means of scores of flank pain (a), bladder pain (b) and urgency (c). Effect on flank pain started showing up from day5 to the end (p = 0.006) and solifenacin is comparable to tamsulosin and combination therapy (p = 0.914 vs 0.195) (a). Combination therapy released bladder pain and urgency throughout the whole follow-up (comparing with the control, both p < 0.001) (b and c). Before day4, Solifenacin and tamsulosin had no significant effect on bladder pain (p = 0.589 vs 0.936) or urgency (p = 0.806 vs 0.729) but both showed showed comparable effectiveness as the combination therapy from day5 to day14 (b and c)