| Literature DB >> 36123663 |
Kim Bundvig Barken1, Rikke Vaabengaard2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For patients suffering from urinary retention due to neurogenic [e.g., spinal cord injury (SCI), spina bifida (SB), multiple sclerosis (MS)] or non-neurogenic [e.g., cancer, benign prostate hypertrophy (BPH)] causes, intermittent catheterization is the primary choice for bladder emptying. This scoping review compared hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters (HCICs) with non-hydrophilic (uncoated) catheters in neurogenic and non-neurogenic patients with respect to satisfaction, preference, adverse events, urinary tract infection (UTI), quality of life (QoL), cost effectiveness, pain, and discomfort.Entities:
Keywords: Bladder management; Hydrophilic; Intermittent catheter; Spina bifida; Spinal cord injury; Uncoated; Urinary
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36123663 PMCID: PMC9487088 DOI: 10.1186/s12894-022-01102-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.090
Fig. 1Overview of the literature search results
Overview of the evidence level for a comparison of HCIC and non-HCIC catheters for the different pathologies
| Population | Satisfaction | Preference | Adverse events | UTI | QoL | HEOR | Pain and discomfort |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + +/− | + | + +/− − | + + +/− | + + | + + +/− − | + |
| SB | +/− − | + +/− | /− − | +/− − | + + | NA | /− |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + +/− | + + + | + + +/− | + + +/− − | + + + | + + +/− − | + + +/− |
| All | + + +/− | + + + | + + +/− − | + + +/− − | + + + | + + +/− − | + + +/− − |
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, HEOR Health economics and outcomes research, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, QoL Quality of life, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury, UTI Urinary tract infection
+ to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− to − − − No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
Satisfaction evidence level
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | Original studies (n) | Reviews (n) | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + +/− | 5 | 1 | 2A-3B |
| SB | +/− − | 5 | NA | 2B |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | +/− | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + +/− | 9 | 8 | 1A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− to − − No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
1, 2, and 3 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial
Preference evidence level
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | Original studies (n) | Reviews (n) | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + | 2 | NA | 2B |
| SB | + +/− | 4 | NA | 2B-3B |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + + | 7 | 2 | 2A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
1, 2, and 3 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial
Adverse events evidence level
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | Original studies (n) | Reviews (n) | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + +/− − | 5 | 5 | 2A-2B |
| SB | /− | 4 | NA | 2B |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + +/− | 3 | 14 | 1A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ + to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− to − − No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
1, 2, and 3 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial
Urinary tract infection
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | Original studies (n) | Reviews (n) | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + + +/− | 12 | 10 | 1A-2B |
| SB | +/− − | 4 | NA | 2B-3B |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | – | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + +/− − | 4 | 22 | 1A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− to − − No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
1, 2, and 3 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial
Clinical studies with available data for a comparison of urinary tract infection (UTI)
| Author, year | No. of patients | HCIC | UC | UTI definition | Period (months) | UTI frequency | Significant difference | Risk ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardenas 2009 [ | 45 | 12/22 | 14/23 | Symptomatic | 12 | 1 or more | No | 0.9 |
| Cardenas 2011 [ | 188 | 69/91a | 85/97a | Symptomatic | 6 | 1 or more | Nob | 0.87 |
| De Ridder 2005 [ | 123 | 39/61 | 51/62 | Symptomatic | 12 | 1 or more | Yes | 0.78 |
| Sutherland 1996 [ | 30 | 1/16 | 1/14 | Symptomatic | NA | 1 or more | No | 0.88 |
| DeFoor 2017 [ | 55 | 2/22 | 7/33 | Strictc | 12 | 1 or more | Yes | 0.43 |
| Samal 2011 [ | 53 | 28/36 | 15/17 | Symptomatic | 24 | 1 or more | Yesd | 0.88 |
| Yoshida 2018 [ | 29 | 2/16 | 5/13 | Symptomatic | 6 | 1 or more | No | 0,33 |
| Cindolo 2004 [ | 100 | 3/50 | 7/50 | Symptomatic | 24 | 2 or more | Yes | 0.43 |
| Burki 2019 [ | 101 | 17/48 | 12/53 | Symptomatic | 12 | 2 or more | No | 1.56 |
| Samal 2011 [ | 53 | 5/36 | 7/17 | Symptomatic | 24 | 2 or more | Yesd | 0.33 |
| Kiddoo 2015e [ | 45 | 3,42 | 2,2 | Symptomatic | 5.5 | Person weeks of UTI | Yesf | 1.55 |
HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheterization, UC Uncoated catheter, UTI Urinary tract infection
aEstimated from curves by Rognoni [5]
bNot significant, but the time to first UTI was found to be significant
cStrict definition of UTI includes:
i. Antibiotic treatment has been prescribed
ii. Bacteriuria ≥ 102 CFU/mL
iii. At least 1 of 7 UTI symptoms based on consensus guidelines [fever, autonomic dysreflexia (sweating, bradycardia, blood pressure elevation), increased spasticity, discomfort or pain over the kidney or bladder or during micturition, onset and/or increase in incontinence episodes, cloudy urine with increased odor, malaise, lethargy, or sense of unease]
iv. Dipstick test is positive for leukocyte esterase
dAverage number of infections is significant
eHCICs versus non-HCIC (both single use and reuse), measuring weeks with UTI
fClaim a p-value of < 0.001; however, based on the overlapping confidence intervals in the original data, the significance of the difference is questionable
Quality of life
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | Original studies (n) | Reviews (n) | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + + | NA | 2 | 2A-3A |
| SB | + + | 1 | NA | 2B |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + + | 3 | 2 | 2A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ + to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
2 and 3 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial
Health economics and outcomes research
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | Original studies (n) | Reviews (n) | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + + +/− − | 6 | 1 | 1A-3B |
| SB | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Mixed | + + +/− − | 2 | 3 | 1A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
1, 2, and 3 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial
Pain and discomfort
| Population | Evidence Pro/con HCIC | # Original studies | # Reviews | LoE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCI | + | 1 | 0 | 2B |
| SB | /− | 3 | 0 | 2B |
| MS | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| BPH | NA | NA | 0 | NA |
| Mixed | + + +/− | 4 | 4 | 1A-2B |
Bold text is a summary of the total evidence level of the pathologies
BPH Benign prostate hypertrophy, HCIC Hydrophilic-coated intermittent catheters, LoE Level of evidence, MS Multiple sclerosis, NA Not available, SB Spina bifida, SCI Spinal cord injury
+ to + + +: The literature supports claims of hydrophilic catheters as being superior to uncoated catheters
− to − − No significant difference between hydrophilic and uncoated catheters or uncoated catheters are superior
1 and 2 refer to the (descending) level of evidence. A = systematic review/meta-analysis; B = clinical trial