| Literature DB >> 28335792 |
Rob Riemsma1, Suzanne Hagen2, Ruth Kirschner-Hermanns3, Christine Norton4, Helle Wijk5, Karl-Erik Andersson6, Christopher Chapple7, Julian Spinks8, Adrian Wagg9, Edward Hutt10, Kate Misso11, Sohan Deshpande11, Jos Kleijnen11,12, Ian Milsom13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incontinence constitutes a major health problem affecting millions of people worldwide. The present study aims to assess cure rates from treating urinary (UI) or fecal incontinence (FI) and the number of people who may remain dependent on containment strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Cure rates; Incontinence; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28335792 PMCID: PMC5364653 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0828-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Summary of study flow
Cure ratesa in studies for female and male patients with stress urinary incontinence
| Follow-up | 3 m | 6 m | 12 m | 18 m | 2 y | 3 y | 5 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment – WOMEN | |||||||
| TVT | 78% | 50% | 53%; 90.1% W | 89.5% | 81% W | ||
| 92% | |||||||
| TVT-O | 82.3%; 94.1%; 92.3%; 76%; 88.4% W; 88.8% | 92.6% | 86.4%; 87% | 74% | |||
| TVT Surgery/Individually tailored/MiniTape/SPARC | 83.1% W (Primus) | 27.7% W (North) | 85%; 82% (VL) | 31.6% W (North) | |||
| 82.3% W (Primus) | 32.3% W (North) | ||||||
| 84.4% W (Primus) | |||||||
| TOT | 82.8% | 84.3% | 63.4%; 74%; 88.6%; 93.3% | 65% | |||
| Retropubic TVT | 89.7% | 86.1%; 65.5%; 81% | 80.1% | 77.4% | |||
| Sling | 94.1% | 92.2% W; 81.3% | 81.2%; 90.8%; 90.1% W; 63.7%; 90.2%; 92.2%; 41% | 52.8% | 83.7%; 50.5% | ||
| 89.8%; 81%; 44% | |||||||
| Colposuspension | 22%/32% | 90% W | |||||
| 28%/36% | |||||||
| Other (surgery) | 79% | ||||||
| PFMT – supervised | 52.9%; 5% | 58.8% | |||||
| Vaginal cone therapy | 9% | ||||||
| Lifestyle advice – unsupervised | 8% | ||||||
| Injectable bulking agents | 36.9%; 24.8% | ||||||
| Duloxetine | NR | ||||||
| Treatment – MEN | |||||||
| Male sling | 80% | 55.8% W | 58% W; 51.4% W; 53.8% | 42.5% | 48% W; 54% W | 40% W; 53% | |
| PFMT – supervised | 51.9% | 78% | |||||
| PFMT – unsupervised | NR | ||||||
| PFMT – supervised + drug | 78% | 62% | |||||
aCure defined as ‘cure’, ‘objective cure’, or ‘success (dry)’
BI behavioral interventions; NR not reported; PFMT pelvic floor muscle training; TOT transobturator tape; TVT tension-free vaginal tape; TVT–O tension-free vaginal tape–obturator; W with containment products; VL Van Leijsen 2013; North North 2010; Primus Primus 2006
Cure ratesa in studies for female and male patients with urgency urinary incontinence
| Follow-up: | 3 m | 6 m | 12 m | 18 m | 2 y | 3 y | 5 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment – WOMEN | |||||||
| Antimuscarinic | 21% | ||||||
| Darifenacinb | 38% | 41% | 42% | 43.8% | |||
| Fesoterodine | 63%; 62%; 64%; 49.2%; 57.8% | ||||||
| Oxybutynin | 25.2%; 20% | ||||||
| Solifenacin | 58%; 59%; 56.2%; 59.6% | 11% | 58% | ||||
| Tolterodine | 13%; 56% | 70% | 45.1% | ||||
| Tolterodine + BI | NR | ||||||
| Trospium | 35.6%; 20.5% | ||||||
| Adrenergic drugs (Mirabegron) | 47.1% | 43.4%; 45.8% | |||||
| Neuromodulation | 39% | 15% (10 y: 17%) | |||||
| Neuromodulation + PFMR | 93% | 39% | 15% (10 y: 17%) | ||||
| TVT | 92% | ||||||
| Botulinum toxin | 35%; 22.9% | 31.3% | |||||
| Treatment – MEN | |||||||
| Solifenacin + Tamsulosin | NR | ||||||
| PFMT – supervised | 24%; 35% | ||||||
| Lifestyle advice – unsupervised | 23%; 38% | ||||||
aCure defined as ‘cure’, ‘objective cure’, ‘success (dry)’, or complete continence
bReductions of ≥ 90% from feeder-study baseline in incontinence episodes/week
BI behavioral interventions; NR not reported; PFMT pelvic floor muscle training; TVT tension-free vaginal tape
Cure ratesa in studies for female and male patients with mixed urinary incontinence
| Follow-up | 3 m | 6 m | 12 m | 18 m | 2 y | 3 y | 5 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment – WOMEN | |||||||
| TVT | NR | ||||||
| Retropubic TVT | 89.7% | 86.1% | 80.1 | 77.4% | |||
| SPARC | 83.1% W | 82.3% W | 84.4% W | ||||
| Sling | 94.1% | 81.3%; 89.8% | 63.7%; 90.2% | 52.8% | 50.5%; 83.7%; | ||
| PFMT – supervised | 5% | NR | 8 y: NR | ||||
| PFMT + neuromodulationb | 93% | ||||||
| PFMT + lifestyle advice | 25% | 28% | |||||
| Vaginal cone therapy | 9% | ||||||
| PFMT – supervised + delivery | 17% | ||||||
| Lifestyle advice (supervised) | 8% | ||||||
| Solifenacin | 52% | ||||||
| Duloxetine | NR | ||||||
| Treatment – MEN | |||||||
| Solifenacin | 26.5% | ||||||
| PFMT – supervised | 44%; 46.3% | 47%; 66.7% | 24%; 35%; 60%; 83.4% | ||||
| PFMT – unsupervised | 40% | 50% | 64% | ||||
| Lifestyle advice – unsupervised | 23%; 38% | ||||||
aCure defined as ‘cure’, ‘objective cure’, ‘success (dry)’ or complete continence
bSuccess, defined as ‘An absence of incontinent episodes (dry) and an OAB-V8 score < 8, indicating no OAB’
NR not reported; PFMT pelvic floor muscle training; TVT tension-free vaginal tape; W with containment products
Cure ratesa in studies for female and male patients with fecal incontinence
| Follow-up: | 3 m | 6 m | 12 m | 18 m | 2 y | 3 y | 5 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment – WOMEN | |||||||
| Biofeedback | NR | ||||||
| Sacral neuromodulation | 38.6%; 38.9% | 31.7%; 39.3% | 41.5%/47.2%; 40.6% | 26% | 37.3% | 41.7% 4 y: 35.6% | 36.1% |
| Peripheral stimulation | NR | ||||||
| Methylcellulose + loperamide | 46% | ||||||
| Injectable bulking agents | NR | NR | |||||
| Standard conservative treatment | NR | ||||||
| Treatment – MEN | |||||||
| Biofeedback | 40.8% | 35.8% | 29% | ||||
aCure defined as ‘cure’, ‘objective cure’, or ‘100% improvement in incontinence episodes per week’
NR not reported
Cure ratesa in studies for female and male patients with neurological problems or diseases
| Follow-up: | 3 m | 6 m | 12 m | 18 m | 2 y | 3 y | 5 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment – WOMEN | |||||||
| Botulinum toxin | NR | ||||||
| Peripheral stimulation | NR | ||||||
| Transanal irrigation | 9% | ||||||
| Voiding program | 41%; 31% | ||||||
| Usual continence care | 30% | ||||||
| Treatment – MEN | |||||||
| None | |||||||
aCure defined as ‘cure’, ‘objective cure’, ‘success (dry)’, or ‘100% improvement in incontinence episodes per week’
NR not reported
Cure ratesa in studies for elderly or cognitively impaired patients with incontinence
| Follow-up | 3 m | 6 m | 12 m | 18 m | 2 y | 3 y | 5 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WOMEN & MEN – Antimuscarinics | |||||||
| Fesoterodine | 50.8% | NR | |||||
| Darifenacin | 48.5%; 32.7% | ||||||
| WOMEN & MEN – Botulinum toxin | |||||||
| Onabotulinumtoxin A | NR | NR | NR | ||||
aCure defined as ‘cure’, ‘objective cure’, ‘success (dry)’, or ‘100% improvement in incontinence episodes per week
NR not reported