| Literature DB >> 29690530 |
Marius Alexandru Moga1, Oana Gabriela Dimienescu2, Andreea Bălan3, Ioan Scârneciu4, Barna Barabaș5, Liana Pleș6.
Abstract
Botulinum toxins (BoNTs) are produced by several anaerobic species of the genus Clostridium and, although they were originally considered lethal toxins, today they find their usefulness in the treatment of a wide range of pathologies in various medical specialties. Botulinum neurotoxin has been identified in seven different isoforms (BoNT-A, BoNT-B, BoNT-C, BoNT-D, BoNT-E, BoNT-F, and BoNT-G). Neurotoxigenic Clostridia can produce more than 40 different BoNT subtypes and, recently, a new BoNT serotype (BoNT-X) has been reported in some studies. BoNT-X has not been shown to actually be an active neurotoxin despite its catalytically active LC, so it should be described as a putative eighth serotype. The mechanism of action of the serotypes is similar: they inhibit the release of acetylcholine from the nerve endings but their therapeutically potency varies. Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) is the most studied serotype for therapeutic purposes. Regarding the gynecological pathology, a series of studies based on the efficiency of its use in the treatment of refractory myofascial pelvic pain, vaginism, dyspareunia, vulvodynia and overactive bladder or urinary incontinence have been reported. The current study is a review of the literature regarding the efficiency of BoNT-A in the gynecological pathology and on the long and short-term effects of its administration.Entities:
Keywords: botulinum toxin; chronic pelvic pain; overactive detrusor; vaginism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29690530 PMCID: PMC5923335 DOI: 10.3390/toxins10040169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Clinical uses of BoNT-A.
| Neuromuscular Disorders | Ophthalmic Disorders | Chronic Pain | Cosmetic and Dermatological Applications | Pelvic floor Disorders | Gastrointestinal Disorders | Spasticity |
| Idiopathic/secondary focal dystonia | Misalignment | Tension headache | Wrinkles | Anismus | Achalasia | Stoke induced spasticity |
| Hemifacial Spasm/post-facial nerve palsy synkinesis | Paralytic strabismus | Cervicogenic headache | Face rejuvenation | Vaginismus | Bruxism | Cephalic tetanus |
| Tremor (essential, writing, palatal or cerebellar) | Therapeutic ptosis for corneal protection | Migraine | Hypersecretory disorders (hyperhidrosis, sialorrhea) | Detrusor sphincter dyssynergia | Temporomandibular joint dysfunction | Multiple sclerosis |
| Tic disorders | Restrictive or myogenic strabismus | Lower back ache | Glabellar frown | Chronic anal fissures | Palatal myoclonus | Traumatic brain injury |
| Myokymia | Upper eyelid retraction | Tennis elbow | Vertical platysma bands | Perineal muscles spasm | Esophageal diverticulosis | Cerebral palsy |
| Neuromyotonia | Duane’s syndrome | Myofascial pain | Browlift | Vulvodynia | Laryngeal disorders | Spinal cord injury |
Classification of BoNTs.
| Origin | BoNT Serotype | Target Substrate | Bont Subtype | Substrate Localization | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C. | A | SNAP-25 | A1; A2; A3; A4; A5; A6; A7; A8; A9; A10; A(B); Ab; Af; Af84 | Presynaptic plasma membrane | |
| B | VAMP | B1; B2; B3; B5(Be); B6; B7; Bf | Synaptic vesicle | ||
| F | VAMP1, VAMP2 | F1; F2; F3; F4; F5 | Synaptic vesicle | ||
| X | VAMP4, VAMP5, Ykt6 | - | Synaptic vesicle | ||
| C. | B | VAMP | B4 | Synaptic vesicle | |
| E | SNAP 25 | E1; E2; E3; E6; E7; E8; E9; E10 | Presynaptic plasma membrane | ||
| F | VAMP1, VAMP2 | F6 | Synaptic vesicle | ||
| C. | C | SNAP 25, Syntaxin 1A, Syntaxin 1b | C; CD; | Presynaptic plasma membrane | |
| D | VAMP1, VAMP2 | D; DC | Synaptic vesicle | ||
| C. | G | VAMP1, VAMP2 | G | Synaptic vesicle | |
| Other organisms producing BoNTs | C. | E | SNAP 25 | E4; E5 | Presynaptic plasma membrane |
| C. | F | VAMP1, VAMP2 | F4 | Synaptic vesicle | |
| En | VAMP2, SNAP25 | - | Synaptic vesicle | ||
| Wo | VAMP2 | - | Synaptic vesicle | ||
Figure 1The five steps of BoNTs’ mechanism of action inside nerve terminal.
Figure 2Mechanism of action of BoNT-A in pain. Inhibition of acetylcholine and neurotransmitter released from motor neuron and nociceptor by BoNT-A reduces pain by inhibiting the pain signal transmission.
Studies of BoNT-A in the treatment of vaginism.
| Author | Study Design | Number of Cases | Treatment Regimen | Outcome Measures | Follow-Up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ghazizadeh [ | Retrospective study | 24 | Dilution: 500 U of BoNT-A diluted with 1.5 mL of normal saline solution. | Vaginal muscles resistance | 12.37 months |
23 patients had vaginal examinations 1-week post injection that showed little or no vaginismus 18 patients achieved satisfactory intercourse after the first injection 4 patients had mild pain 1 patient needed a second injection; 1 patient refused vaginal examination and did not attempt to have coitus |
| Shafik [ | Case-control study | 13 | BoNT group: A single injection; dose and dilution: 25 U diluted in 1 mL saline solution | Satisfaction of intromission | 3.3 months | All the symptoms at patients injected with BT improved. There was no recurrence during the follow-up period Control subjects did not improve |
| Bertolasi [ | Prospective study | 39 | Repeated cycles at 4 weeks of botulinum neurotoxin injected into levator ani. | Possibility of sexual intercourse; levator ani EMG hyperactivity; Lamont scores, VAS, FSFI | 105 (±50 SD) weeks | At 4 weeks after the first cycle the primary outcome improved, as did the secondary outcomes When follow-up ended, 63.2%—were completely recovered; 15.4% still needed reinjections and 15.4% had dropped out the study |
| Pacik [ | Retrospective study | 20 | Dose: 100 to 150 U of BoNT-A; Dilution: 100 U of BoNT-A diluted in 2 mL of saline; | Possibility of having intercourse | Time of follow up not reported |
80% of patients achieved intercourse in maximum 3 months 15% of patients continued the injections (maximum 6 dilators); 5% of patient did not respond to treatment (unable to advance beyond the first dilator) |
| Pacik [ | Clinical trial | 241 | Dose: 100 U of BoNT-A; Dilution: 2 mL of saline; | Pain and anxiety scores; time to achieve intercourse untoward effects. | 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year |
71% reported at a median of 2.5-week pain-free intercourse; 2.5% were unable to achieve intercourse during follow up 26.6% were lost within 1 year after treatment. 1.24% developed mild temporary stress incontinence, 0.41% temporary excessive vaginal dryness |
Studies of BoNT-A in treatment of vulvodynia.
| Author | Study Design | Number of Cases | Treatment Regimen | Outcome Measures | Follow-Up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yoon [ | Retrospective study | 7 | Dilution: 20 U of the BoNT diluted in saline solution; Dose: 20 U of BoNT-A | VAS (before and 2 weeks after each administration) | 4–24 months | The subjective pain score improved from 8.3 to 1.4, and no one has experienced a recurrence. No adverse effects were observed; In 2 cases, pain decreased after one injection; 5 cases needed injections twice; Patients reported subjective improvement in sexual; life and having no significant pain or discomfort during or after intercourse. |
| Petersen [ | Randomized, double blinded, placebo-controlled study | 32 cases | Dilution: 100 U of BoNT-A diluted in 2.5 mL saline solution; | VAS, FSFI; FSDS; Manifest Female Sexual Dysfunction; Demographic Questionnaire; SF-36 | 3, 6, 9, and 12 months | Both groups: significantly pain reduction ( No significantly improvements on the FSFI score until the second follow up visit ( Compared to the group treated with BoNT-A, in the placebo group it was observed higher decrease of the sexual distress until the second follow-up ( |
| Pelletier [ | Retrospective study | 20 | Dilution: 1 mL: 50 U BoNT-A diluted in 1 mL saline; | VAS; FSFI; DLQI | 3, 6 months |
16 patients reported improved VAS scores; At the 3 months follow up visit, 13 patients reported possibility of sexual intercourse; After the 6 months follow up visit, QoL and sexual function reported to be satisfactory. |
| Jeon [ | Retrospective study | 73 | Dose: 40 to 100 U BoNT-A (11 patients) | VAS | 6 to 24 months | Gabapentin group: the VAS score decreased from 8.6 to 3.2 after treatment ( BoNT-A group: the VAS score decreased from 8.1 to 2.5 ( |
Studies of BoNT-A in chronic pelvic pain and pelvic floor muscle spasm treatment.
| Author | Study Design | Number of Cases | Treatment Regimen | Outcome Measures | Follow-Up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelowo [ | Retrospective cohort study | 31 | Dose: 100–300 U BoNT-A | Patient-reported tenderness on levator palpation; patient-reported symptom improvement; time to and number of repeat injections; complications | <6 weeks post-injection (visit 1) and ≥6 weeks post injection (visit 2). |
93.5% completed the first follow-up visit; 79.3% reported improvement in pain and 20.7% reported no improvement. Median pain with levator palpation was significantly lower than before injection ( 58.0% had a second follow-up visit with a median pain score lower than before injection ( |
| Abott [ | Double-blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. | 60 | Cases: 80 U BoNT-A (20 units/mL) |
Dysmenorrhea; dyspareunia; dyschezia; Non-menstrual; pelvic pain assessed VAS scale | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 months | In case of dyspareunia and non-menstrual pain, it was observed that VAS score improved in the group treated with BoNT (66 vs. 12 and 51 vs. 22 respectively; also, the pelvic floor pressure decreased (49 vs. 32) Dyspareunia was reduced in the placebo group (64 vs. 27); |
| Jarvis [ | Prospective study | 12 | Dose: 40 U BoNT; Dilutions: 10 U/mL; 20 U/mL; and 100 U/mL. | VAS; SF-12; EQ-5D; Pelvic floor muscles manometry; Sexual activity scores | 2, 4, 8 and 12 weeks post-treatment | In case of dyspareunia and dysmenorrhea, VAS scores improved (80 vs, 28; SF-12, EQ-5D and sexual activity scores were improved until week 12. |
| Morrissey [ | Prospective pilot open-label study | 21 | Dose: up to 300 U BoNT-A | VAS scores for pain and dyspareunia; QoL and sexual function; GRA scale for pelvic pain; pelvic floor tone and tenderness; vaginal manometry. | 6 months (4, 8, 12, and 24 weeks after injections) |
61.9% of subjects reported improvement on GRA at 4 weeks and 80.9% at 8, 12, and 24 weeks post injection, compared with baseline; 58.8%, 68.8%, 80% and 83.3% reported less dyspareunia at 4, 8, 12, and 24 weeks, respectively. VAS score improved at weeks 12 (5.6, Vaginal manometry—decrease in resting pressures and in maximum contraction pressures at all follow-up visits ( Reported post-injection adverse effects: worsening of the following preexisting conditions: constipation (28.6%), stress urinary incontinence (4.8%), fecal incontinence (4.8%), and new onset stress urinary incontinence (4.8%). |
| Rao [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled study | 12 | Cases: 100 U of BoNT-A intra sphincterian (anal) at 3 months intervals; Placebo: saline solution | Daily frequency; VAS; balloon expulsion; anorectal manometry, pudendal nerve latency tests | NR | The VAS score did not improve ( At 3 months follow up, the mean VAS pain score was decreased: 6.79 vs. 7.08 ( Rectal sensory thresholds, anal sphincter pressures, balloon expulsion times, pudendal nerve latency did not decrease after BoNT-A or placebo |
Studies of BoNT in interstitial cystitis.
| Author | Study Design | Number of Cases | Treatment Regimen | Outcome Measures | Follow-Up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pinto [ | Prospective study | 17 | Dose: 100 U of Botulin toxin Administration: bladder trigone only, under cystoscopy guidance | 3-day voiding chart; VAS O’Leary-Sant score pressure flow study and flowmetry | 9 months | Pain score decreased at 1 month follow up visit and 3 months follow up visit (from 5.7 to 2.2 and 1.9) ( At the end of the study, 41.17% of patients reported increased urinary frequency with lower threshold of pain and O’Leary-Sant score; All patients reported subjective improvement. |
| Giannantoni [ | Prospective Study | 7 | Dose: 200 U BoNT-A, diluted in 100 mL saline, without any form of anesthesia. | voiding diary; urodynamic; Visual Analog Scale for pain assessment | 3 months | At baseline mean day- and night-time urinary frequencies were 9.1 and 4.6, respectively. Mean VAS score was 6.5. On urodynamics, mean bladder capacity was 270.4 mL. No patients showed any impairment of bladder emptying 1 week after treatment, mean day and night-time urinary frequency fell to 7.4 and to 3.3; VAS score significantly dropped to 3.5 ( Maximum cystometric capacity was 321.4 mL. Symptoms and urodynamic parameters did not change in 3/7 patients; No local or systemic side effects were reported during or after instillation |
| Giannantoni [ | Prospective study | 15 | Dose: 200 U BoNT-A diluted in 20 mL saline; | 3-day voiding chart; pain visual analog scale; urodynamics | 12 months | at follow up visit from 1 and 3 months, 86.6% of patients reported improvement in the symptoms; decreased urinary frequency and VAS score; At the last follow up visit all patients reported re-apparition of pain; Complication: in 9 cases after 1 month, 4 cases at the 3-month visit and in 2 cases at 5-month visit, the patients reported dysuria. |
| Kuo [ | Prospective study | 10 | Dose: In 5 patients, 100 U of BoNT-A; additional 100 U BoNT-A into the trigone in the other 5 patients. | number of daily urinations; urodynamic changes functional bladder capacity; bladder pain; | 3 months | functional bladder capacity significantly increased (155 after injection vs. 77 mL at baseline, VAS scores and frequency of daily urinations were decreased urinary frequency and bladder pain were improved after the 3 months follow up visit in 2 patients The urodynamic results (cystometric capacity) were improved (287 vs. 210 mL, |
| Carl [ | Two center pilot study | 29 | Dose:500 U BoNT-A diluted in 3 mL saline | Daytime frequency; nycturia; urgency; Pain (VAS score) Urodynamic evaluation | 6 months | Daytime frequency, nycturia, urgency and pain by VAS scale decreased by 50%, 75%, 43% and 81%, respectively, 6 weeks after treatment ( maximal cystometric capacity increased from 282 to 360 mL; bladder compliance increased from 13 mL/cmH20 to 23 mL/cmH2O; Two patients suffered from temporary hematuria, 3 patients had residual urine of more than 100 cc and 1 patient showed urinary retention |
| Ramsay [ | Prospective study | 11 | Dose: 200–300 U-BoNT-A; | BFLUTS; KHQ; 24-h voiding frequency chart; Filling and voiding urodynamics; Urodynamic variables PIP1 | 14 weeks | Baseline BFLUTS score 132.Improved to 118 at 6 weeks (19%, Frequency improved post injection to 12 at 6 weeks ( FDV improved from 96 to 174 mls ( |
| Pinto [ | Prospective study | 16 | Dose: 100 U BoNT-A | VAS Voiding dysfunction; O’Leary-Sant score; Urinary tract infections | 12 months | VAS score and O’Leary-Sant score decreased; urinary frequency increased; quality of life scores was similar after each injection; The effects of BoNT-A lasted an average of 9.9 ± 2.4 months. |
Studies of BoNT in overactive bladder.
| Author | STUDY DESIGN | Number of Cases | Treatment Regimen | Outcome Measures | Follow-Up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Le Normand [ | Prospective, | 99 | Dose: 50 U, 100 U or 150 U BoNT-A | Clinical and urodynamic variables; Quality of life (QoL) | day 8; 1, 3, 5, and 6 months | after three months >50% improvement in urgency and urge urinary incontinence in 65% and 56% of patients who respectively received 100 U ( Complete continence: in 55% and 50% patients after 100 UI and 150 U BoNTA treatment at month 3; QoL improved up to the 6-month visit; 3 patients with postvoid residuals >200 mL in the 150 U group and a few urinary tract infections. |
| Popat [ | Prospective, open label study | 75 | Dose: 300 U (NOB) or 200 U (IOB) of BoNT | urodynamic maximum cystometric capacity; maximum detrusor pressure during filling; number of incontinence episodes; frequency of voids; | 1 month and 4 months | At 4 months, cystometric capacity increased in NOB and IOB cases treated with BoNT (229.1 to 427.0 mL, Decreased maximum detrusor pressure during filling in NOB and IOB (60.7 to 26.1 cm H2O, Frequency decreased in NOB and IOB patients (12.3 to 6.6 voids/24 h, Urgency decreased in NOB and IOB (7.5 to 1.44 episodes/24 h, |
| Schmid [ | Prospective study | 180 (45 men, 135 women) | Dose: 100 U of BTX-A into the detrusor at 30 different sites. Reinjection: 52/180 of patients were reinjected after the effect had diminished (time interval between two treatments was mean 11 months) | Urgency, frequency, maximal cystometric capacity (MCBC) volume at first and strong desire to void (FDV, UV) detrusor compliance (DC), postvoiding residual volume (PVR), QoL assessment | After 4, 12 and 36 weeks |
87% of patients showed a significant ( frequency decreased from 15 to 7 micturition and nycturia from 5 to 2; MCBC increased from mean 245 to 395 mL; FDV increased from mean 127 to 218 mL; strong desire to void from mean 215 to 312 mL; QoL assessment revealed a significant subjective improvement in all urge-related items; side effects: 6 temporary urine retentions and 16 urinary infections. |
| Brubaker [ | Randomized, double-blind, | 43 | Dose: 200 U BoNT dissolved in 6 mL saline Placebo: 3 mL saline. | frequency of incontinence episodes; symptom and quality of life measures (PGISC); the duration and occurrence of voiding dysfunction | 12 months |
60% of the cases injected with BoNT-A reported improved PGISC scores post-void residual urine increased in 43% of cases urinary tract infection rate increased in the cases with increased post-void residual urine |
| Khanlow [ | Prospective, open label study | 81 | Dose: 200 U BoNT-A | UDI IIQ | NR | Mean UDI and IIQ scores improved after injection 1 in all patients (56 to 26 and 59 to 21), after injection 2 in 29.6% of cases (52 to 30 and 51 to 24), after injection 3 in 16.04% of cases (40 to 19 and 43 to 17), after injection 4 in 7.40% (44 to 17 and 61 to 15) and after injection 5 in 4.93% (51 to 17 and 63 to 14). In 43% of cases, self-catheterization was requested |
| Dowson [ | Prospective study | 100 | Dose: 200 U BoNT-A Administration: into suburothelium or detrusor muscle under cystoscopic guidance | QoL measures; voiding diary; residual volume; complications | To five BoNT-A injections. |
37% of patients completed the study after the second administration of BoNT-A (13% of cases reported poor efficacy and 11% due to the need of intermittent self-catheterization) In 35% of cases, the need of self-catheterization was seen after the first administration of BoNT-A. The period between administration of BoNT doses was ~322 days |