| Literature DB >> 29017505 |
Darshan P Patel1, Sara M Lenherr1, John T Stoffel2, Sean P Elliott3, Blayne Welk4, Angela P Presson5, Amitabh Jha6, Jeffrey Rosenbluth6, Jeremy B Myers7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The majority of spinal cord injury (SCI) patients have urinary issues, such as incontinence, retention, and frequency. These problems place a significant burden on patients' physical health and quality of life (QoL). There are a wide variety of bladder management strategies available to patients with no clear guidelines on appropriate selection. Inappropriate bladder management can cause hospitalizations and serious complications, such as urosepsis and renal failure. Patients believe that both independence and ability to carry out daily activities are just as important as physical health in selecting the right bladder-management strategy but little is known about patient's QoL with different bladder managements. Our study's aim is to assess patient reported QoL measures with various bladder managements after SCI. This manuscript describes the approach, study design and common data elements for our central study.Entities:
Keywords: Bladder management; Incontinence; Patient reported outcomes; Quality of life; Spinal cord injury; Urinary bladder
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29017505 PMCID: PMC5635498 DOI: 10.1186/s12894-017-0286-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria for patients with spinal cord injury
| Inclusion criteria: | |
| • Age ≥ 18 years | |
| Exclusion criteria: | |
| • Congenital SCI – cerebral palsy, spina bifida, caudal regression, sacral agenesis. |
Fig. 1Summary of study procedures
Fig. 2Patient changes in management or significant treatments and complications and how QoL is captured post these events
Patient reported outcome measures used for the study
| Bladder specific: | |
| • Neurogenic Bladder Symptom Score | |
| • SCI-QoL | |
| ○ Bladder management difficulties | |
| ○ Bladder complications | |
| General QoL: | |
| • Modified SF-12 | |
| Psychosocial: | |
| • SCI-QoL | |
| ○ Pain interference | |
| ○ Independence | |
| ○ Positive affect and well-being | |
| ○ Satisfaction with social roles and activities | |
| Other: | |
| • Likert pain scale | |
| • Autonomic dysreflexia | |
| • SCI-QoL | |
| ○ Basic mobility | |
| ○ Fine motor | |
| ○ Self-care | |
| • Bowel function | |
| ○ Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score | |
| ○ SCI-QoL – Bowel management difficulties |
Estimates of number of participants to detect differences in the SCI-QoL and the NBSS
| Questionnaire | Comparison groups | Detected differences | Detected differences |
|---|---|---|---|
| SCI-QoL | IDC vs CIC | 2.34 (4.7%) | 1.91 (3.8%) |
| IDC vs. surgery | 2.11 (4.2%) | 1.72 (3.4%) | |
| CIC vs. surgery | 2.42 (4.8%) | 1.98 (4.0%) | |
| NBSS | IDC vs CIC | 2.34 (11.7%) | 1.91 (9.6%) |
| IDC vs. surgery | 2.11(10.6%) | 1.72 (8.6%) | |
| CIC vs. surgery | 2.42(12.1%) | 1.98 (9.9%) |
SCI-QoL Spinal Cord Injury Quality of Life Scale, NBSS Neurogenic Bladder Symptom Score, CIC clean intermittent catheterization, IDC indwelling catheter