| Literature DB >> 34519843 |
Kate H Moore1, Wendy Allen2, Katrina Parkin2, Fiona Beaupeurt2, Chris Chan2, Zhuoran Chen2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND HYPOTHESIS: The continence dish has been a treatment option since 2002 for women with stress urinary incontinence (SUI) who decline surgery, but few quantitative objective efficacy data are published. We aimed to determine the efficacy and acceptability of this device for pure SUI or mixed incontinence (MUI).Entities:
Keywords: Continence dish; Stress incontinence; Vaginal device
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34519843 PMCID: PMC9119894 DOI: 10.1007/s00192-021-04969-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Urogynecol J ISSN: 0937-3462 Impact factor: 1.932
Fig. 1a Pink continence dish, 65 mm in diameter. b White continence dish, with perforations to allow mucous drainage/ mucosal seal
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of continence dish sitting correctly with protuberance at bladder neck
Reasons for non-continuations
| Adverse events: 6/91 (6.6%) | |
| Pain/discomfort with device in situ | 3 |
| Vaginal bleeding/staining | 2 (+1 in a continuing participant) |
| Recurrent vaginal thrush and erosion | 1 |
| Other reasons: 27/91 (29.7%) | |
| Unable to retain device | 9 (+1 thrush erosion) |
| Minimal benefit | 9 |
| Chose to have surgery | 6 |
| Unable to remove device | 1 |
| Medically unfit to continue | 1 |
| Stopped sports, no more leak | 1 |
Baseline demographic data of completed patients
| Patient characteristics ( | |
| Median age (years) | 67 (IQR 50–76) |
| Postmenopausal | 45/64 (70%) |
| Vaginal oestrogen use | 42/64 (65%) |
| Pelvic organ prolapse | 35/64 (55%) |
| Self-insertion/removal | 40/64 (62.5%) |
| Type of incontinence | |
| Pure stress | 22/64 (34%) |
| Mixed | 42/64 (66%) |
Continence dish outcome measure of completed patients
| Outcome measure ( | Pre-therapy (median ± IQR) | Post-therapy (median ± IQR) | Significance ( | % Patients dry or “good” while using device |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICIQ | ||||
| All (64) | 14 (10.3–18) | 7 (4.0–12.0) | < 0.0001 | 18/64 (28%) |
| Pure stress (22) | 11 (9.0–15.3) | 4 (2.5–8.5) | < 0.0001 | 12/22 (54%) |
| Mixed (42) | 16 (12.8–19.0) | 9 (5.0–15.0) | < 0.0001 | 6/42 (14%) |
| 24-h pad test | ||||
| All (51) | – | 4.5 (0.0–14.6) | – | 34/51 (66%) (ITT 53%) |
| Pure stress (17) | – | 0.0 (0.0–8.48) | 0.041 | 15/17 (88%) (ITT 68%) |
| Mixed (34) | – | 6.2 (0.95–19.7) | 19/34 (56%) (ITT 45%) | |
| IIQ < 50 | ||||
| All (52) | – | 16.7 (4.7–47.5) | – | 65% |
| Pure stress (17) | – | 14.3 (2.4–33.3) | 0.394 | 76% |
| Mixed (35) | – | 19.0 (4.7–61.8) | 60% | |
| Patient satisfaction score > 85% | ||||
| All (55) | – | 19.0 (15–23) | – | 42% |
| Pure stress (19) | – | 21.0 (17.23) | 0.098 | 53% |
| Mixed (36) | – | 18.5 (15–22.8) | 36% | |
Where: ICIQ, International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire; IIQ, Incontinence Impact Questionnaire; ITT, Intention to Treat
Significance values denoted for the ICIQ outcome measure present pre- and post-therapy comparisons for the given patient group, using Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank test. All other reported p-values represent the significance between pure stress and mixed patient groups for the given outcome measure, using Mann-Whitney test
Fig. 3Results of ICIQ scores pre- and post-therapy, in relation to stress urinary incontinence (SUI) and mixed urinary incontinence (MUI). Data are presented as median ± IQR