| Literature DB >> 33713279 |
Arndt van Ophoven1, Stefan Engelberg2, Helen Lilley3, Karl-Dietrich Sievert4,5,6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Sacral neuromodulation (SNM) has been used in carefully selected patients with neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunctions (nLUTD) for over two decades.Entities:
Keywords: Implantable neurostimulators; Magnetic resonance imaging; Meta-analysis; Neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction; Sacral neuromodulation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33713279 PMCID: PMC8004509 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-021-01650-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Systematic literature review: inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Patients treated with sacral neuromodulationa AND nLUTD | Conference abstracts and systematic reviews |
| LUTD was classified as neurogenic according to the author’s judgments | Studies not published as full-text articles |
| nLUTD included the following conditions, but were not limited to: | Non-human studies |
| Multiple sclerosis | Non-original articles |
| Spinal cord injury | Studies not published in English |
| Cerebral vascular disease/cerebrovascular accident/cerebral palsy | Patient populations with age < 16 years |
| CNS tumor, CNS surgery | Other therapies than SNM/SNS |
| Pelvic surgery (i.e., hysterectomy, Wertheim) | |
| Parkinson disease | |
| Back surgery/disc prolapse | |
| Diabetic neuropathy, other types of neuropathy | |
| Alzheimer’s disease | |
| Spina bifida/myelomeningocele (MMC) | |
| Other: ependymoma, myelitis, borreliosis, Dandy–Walker syndrome, inflammatory neuronal reaction, etc. | |
| Detrusor hyperreflexia | |
| Detrusor sphincter dyssynergia | |
| Urinary retention, voiding dysfunction | |
| Studies with at least one relevant outcome reported |
aSacral neuromodulation (SNM), sacral nerve stimulation (SNS)
List of included studies
| References | Publication year | Level of evidence | Study type | No. of neurogenic patients | No. of women (% female) | Mean age, year (of neurogenic patients) | Mean follow-up (range)* | Study includes data on |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Azzawi et al. | 2018 | 4 | PCS | 11 | 14 (58%)* | 32.8* | 12 months (median) | T + P |
| Amundsen et al. | 2005 | 3 | PCoS | 23 | 91 (87%)* | 60* | 29 months (8–48)* | P |
| Andretta et al. | 2014 | 4 | RCS | 17 | 13 (76%)* | 49.8 | 52 months | P |
| Arlen et al. | 2011 | 3 | RCoS | 32 | 16 (50%) | 56.03 | 2.3 years | T + P |
| Bartley et al. | 2017 | 3 | PCS | 109 | 84 (77.1%) | 63 | 2.3 years | T + P |
| Bertapelle et al. | 2008 | 4 | PCS | 30 | 68 (71%)* | NR | NR (12–48 months) | T + P |
| Bosch et al. | 1998 | 4 | CS | 7 | 7 (100%) | 46* | 6 months | T + P |
| Bosch et al. | 2000 | 4 | PCS | 11 | 70 (82%)* | 46.2* | 47.1 months | T + P |
| Bross et al. | 2003 | 4 | PCS | 24 | NR | 46* | NR | T |
| Carone et al. | 1999 | 4 | RCS & PCS | 12 | NR | NR | 13.3 months | T + P |
| Chaabane et al. | 2011 | 4 | RCS | 62 | 47 (76%) | 50.5 | 4.3 years | T + P |
| Chartier-Kastler et al. | 2000 | 4 | PCS | 32 | 9 (100% at permanent implant) | 42.6 | 43.6 months (7–72) | T + P |
| Chartier Kastler et al. | 2001 | 4 | PCS | 14 | 7 (50%) | 41.7 | 18 months | T |
| Chen et al. | 2015 | 4 | RCS | 23 | 6 (26%) | 37.3 | 17.5 months | T + P |
| Daniels et al. | 2010 | 4 | RCS | 32 | 27 (84%) | 61.8 (27–83) | 29.3 months | T + P |
| Denzinger et al. | 2012 | 4 | PCS | 8 | 6 (75%) | 46.5 | 12 months* | T + P |
| Dobberfuhl et al. | 2017 | 4 | RCS | 121 | (77.2%) | NR | NR | T + P |
| Engeler et al. | 2015 | 4 | PCS | 17 | 13 (76%) | 46.3 | 3 years | T + P |
| Garg et al. | 2007 | 4 | CR | 1 | 1 (100%) | 58 | 8 months | T + P |
| Groen et al. | 2012 | 4 | PCS | 5 | 15 (83%)* | 15 (9–17) | 28.8 months | T + P |
| Hohenfellner et al. | 1998 | 4 | PCS | 11 | 9 (81%) | 43.4 | 13 months (9–28) | T + P |
| Hohenfellner et al. | 2001 | 4 | CS | 27 | 19 (70%) | 44.9 | 54 months (11–96) | T + P |
| Ishigooka et al. | 1998 | 4 | CS | 4 | 1 (25%) | 36.8 | 36 weeks | P |
| Lansen-Koch et al. | 2012 | 4 | PCS | 10 | 4 (40%) | 26.4 | 1, 3, 6, & 12 months | T + P |
| Lavano et al. | 2004 | 4 | CS | 6 | NR | NR | Max. 26 months | T + P |
| Lombardi et al. | 2008 | 3 | PCoS | 17 | 17 (100%) | 39.4 | 22 months (median) | P |
| Lombardi et al. | 2009 | 4 | RCS | 24 | 10 (42%) | 46 | 61 months (median) | T + P |
| Lombardi et al. | 2011 | 4 | RCS | 37 | 0 | NR | > 3 years (median) | T + P |
| Lombardi et al. | 2013 | 4 | RCS | 77 | 27 (35%) | Non-responders: 41.7 Responders: 40.1 | 54 months | T + P |
| Lombardi et al. | 2014 | 4 | RCS | 85 | 33 (39%) | Non-responders: 39.3 Responders: 38.2 | 50 months (6–95) | T + P |
| Marinkovic et al. | 2010 | 4 | RCCS | 14 | 14 (100%) | 46 | 4.32 years | T + P |
| Marinkovic et al. | 2011 | 4 | RCS | 7 | 7 (100%) | 51 | 3.87 years | T + P |
| Minardi et al. | 2005 | 4 | RCS & PCS | 5 | 3 (60%) | 48.6 | 30.4 months (24–38) | T + P |
| Minardi et al. | 2012 | 4 | RCS | 25 | 15 (60%) | 45.2 (31–68) (at permanent implant) | 49.4 months | T + P |
| Peters et al. | 2013 | 3 | PCoS | 71 | 47 (75%, at permanent implant) | 63 (at permanent implant) | NR | T + P |
| Roth | 2007 | 4 | CR | 1 | 1 (100%) | 45 | 5 months | T + P |
| Schurch et al. | 2003 | 4 | CS | 3 | 2 (66%) | 31 | NR | T |
| Seif et al. | 2004 | 3 | RCoS | 41 | NR | 53.6* | NR | T |
| Sharifiaghdas | 2019 | 4 | RCS | 4 (≥ 16 years) | 2 (50%) | 16.75 (successfully treated patients) | 14.25 months* | T + P |
| Sievert et al. | 2010 | 3 | PCoS | 10 | 0 (0%) | 31 | 26.2 months | P |
| Spinelli et al. | 2003 | 4 | PCS | 5 | 12 (80%)* | 49* | 11 months (5–19) | T + P |
| Wallace et al. | 2007 | 4 | RCS | 33 | 31 (94%) | 54 | 12.4 months (4–32) | T + P |
| Wöllner et al. | 2016 | 4 | RCS | 50 | 30 (60%) | 46 | 1.3 years | T + P |
| Wosnitzer et al. | 2009 | 4 | CR | 1 | 1 (100%) | 20 | 5 months | T + P |
| Xu et al. | 2017 | 4 | CR | 2 (≥ 16 years) | 0 (0%) | 17 | 12 months | T + P |
| Zhang C et al. | 2019 | 4 | CR | 1 | 0 (0%) | 56 | 3 months | T + P |
| Zhang P et al. | 2019 | 4 | RCS | NR | 33 (31%) of (107 at permanent implant) | 46.8 | 20.1 months* | T + P |
Full references from Table 1 not discussed in this meta-analysis can be found in an online supplementary material
CR case report, CS case study, NR not reported, P permanent, PCS prospective clinical study, PCoS prospective cohort study, RCS retrospective clinical study, RCCS retrospective case–control study, RCoS retrospective cohort study, T test
*Indicates that data presented are for the full study population, which may include non-neurogenic patients
Fig. 1Summary of the risk of bias of the studies included in the meta-analysis of permanent SNM. Results are weighted by sample size
Fig. 2Risk of bias assessment of included studies for permanent SNM
Fig. 3PRISMA flow diagram of included/excluded studies
Success rate of test SNM by underlying dysfunction
| Dysfunction | Total no. of patients with dysfunction | No. of patients with successful testing | Success rate (%) | Exact 95% confidence intervalc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Incomplete SCI | 116 | 56 | 48.3 | (38.9%, 57.7%) |
| Multiple sclerosis | 94 | 72 | 76.6 | (66.7%, 84.7%) |
| Back surgerya | 151 | 127 | 84.1 | (77.3%, 89.5%) |
| Diabetes/polyneuropathy | 47 | 31 | 66.0 | (50.7%, 79.1%) |
| Spina bifida/MMC | 25 | 12 | 48.0 | (27.8%, 68.7%) |
| Cerebral vascular disease | 8 | 4 | 50.0 | (15.7%, 84.3%) |
| Parkinson disease | 11 | 6 | 54.5 | (23.4%, 83.3%) |
| Pelvic surgery | 9 | 7 | 77.8 | (40.0%, 97.2%) |
| Complete SCI | 9 | 0 | 0.0 | (−, −) |
| Complete SCI (early stim.)b | 10 | 8 | 80.0 | (44.4%, 97.5%) |
| Cerebral palsy | 3 | 3 | 100.0 | (−, −) |
| Other neurological condition | 15 | 13 | 86.7 | |
| Not clearly reported | 239 | 145 | 60.7 | |
| Total | 737 | 484 |
SCI spinal cord injury, MMC myelomeningocele
aIncluding disc disease
bComplete SCI (early stimulation): since there was no SNM test [31], a virtual test phase during the chronic phase has been assumed
cFor the calculation of the exact 95% confidence interval data was pooled per indication across all applicable studies
Fig. 4a Meta-analysis of the test success rate of SNM (forest plot including studies with ≥ 4 patients). b Meta-analysis of the SNM success rate of the permanent implant (forest plot including studies with ≥ 4 patients; per-protocol analysis)
Adverse events with permanent SNM
| Adverse event | No. of patients with adverse event/total no. of permanently implanted patients | Percentage of adverse events | No. of studies reporting type of AE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infection | 18/494 | 3.6% | 8 |
| Pain at implant | 16/494 | 3.2% | 8 |
| Adverse stimulation | 10/494 | 2.0% | 5 |
| Lead migration | 16/494 | 3.2% | 7 |
| Lead breakage | 6/494 | 1.2% | 4 |
| Hardware issues | 14/494 | 2.8% | 6 |
| Adverse change in bowel function | 2/494 | 0.4% | 1 |
| Loss of effectiveness | 23/494 | 4.7% | 9 |
| Other | 9/494 | 1.8% | 6 |
| Sacral neuromodulation (SNM) has been used for more than 20 years in patients with neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunctions (nLUTD). |
| With new MRI-safe devices available, there is an increasing interest in these indications. However, clinical data are limited. |
| This systematic literature review supports the effectiveness and safety of SNM in patients with nLUTD. |
| More vigorous studies are needed. |