Rehab R&D Center - GRECC Audio Conferences
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Transcript Rehab R&D Center - GRECC Audio Conferences
Assessment and Management of
Urinary Incontinence in the Clinic
Kathryn L. Burgio, PhD
Associate Director for GRECC Research
&
Patricia S. Goode, MD
Associate Director for GRECC Clinical Programs
Birmingham/Atlanta Geriatric Research Education
and Clinical Center – July 27, 2006
Prevalence of Incontinence
Prevalence (%)
Severity
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Severe
Moderate
Slight
Unknown
20- 25- 30- 35- 40- 45- 50- 55- 60- 65- 70- 75- 80- 85+
24 29 34 39 44 49 54 59 64 69 74 79 84
Age
Hannestad et al., 2000
UI - Treatment Seeking
1,104 Community Dwelling Older Adults
with Urinary Incontinence on interview
38%
62%
Reported to
Provider
Not Reported
Burgio, et al: JAGS 42: 208, 1994
Reasons for Not Reporting Incontinence
to Provider
Not
aware that can be treated
Normal part of aging
Personal problem (not medical)
Embarrassed
Fear of nursing home placement
Afraid treatment requires surgery
Include Incontinence
in the Review of Systems
for all geriatric patients.
Patient Case
75
year old man
Goes to the bathroom every 1-2 hours
daytime and 3 times at night.
About once a week, on the way to the
bathroom, he can’t make it and wets his
clothes.
Evaluation?
Diagnosis?
Appropriate treatment?
Types of Incontinence
Urge
Functional
Stress
Overflow
Work-up of Incontinence
History
Physical
Urinalysis
Post-void
Residual Volume
Incontinence History
Type
Do you leak urine during physical activity such as
coughing, sneezing, lifting, or exercising?
Do you get the urge to go and can’t make it
without leaking?
Onset
Severity
Frequency of leakage
Need for absorbent products
Incontinence History
Lower
urinary tract symptoms
Urgency,
frequency, nocturia, dysuria,
weak stream, straining to void, etc.
Fluid
intake – volume and type
Previous
treatments and effects on
incontinence
Medical History
Medical,
neurological, history
Surgical
history
Prostatectomy
Review
Habits
medications including OTC
(caffeine, tobacco, alcohol use)
Physical Exam
Brief
Neurologic Exam
Gait
Lower
extremity strength
Cogwheel rigidity
Sphincter tone and voluntary
contraction
Rectal
(and Pelvic for women)
Urinalysis
Bacteriuria
Pyuria
Glycosuria
Hematuria
Post-Void Residual Volume
Measure
amount
of urine left in
bladder after
voiding.
Ultrasound
or
catheter
Normal:
< 50 ml
Patient Case
75
year old man
Frequent voiding and weekly urge incontinence
Work up
Hx: Diabetes for 10 years, tries to adhere to
diet – drinks about 4-5 diet sodas/day.
Insomnia – takes Tylenol PM. Constipation.
Physical: hard stool in vault
UA: 2+ glucose
(and Hgb A1C = 9.8 one month ago)
PVR: 200 mL
Diagnosis?
Treatment Options?
Contributors to UI
to Treat First
Drugs and Diet
Infection
Atrophic Urethritis
Psychological - Depression, Delirium
Endocrine - Diabetes, Hypercalcemia
Restricted Mobility
Stool Impaction
Contributors to UI
to Treat First
Drugs
Sedatives including alcohol
ACE inhibitors (cough)
Antipsychotics (pseudoparkinsonism)
Diuretics (bad timing)
Alpha Blockers – worsen stress UI
Anticholinergics – incomplete emptying
Contributors to UI
to Treat First
Drugs and Diet – Caffeine & Fluids
Infection
Atrophic Urethritis
Psychological - Depression, Delirium
Endocrine - Diabetes, Hypercalcemia
Restricted Mobility
Stool Impaction
Patient Case
75
year old man
Frequent voiding and weekly urge incontinence
Work up
Hx: Diabetes for 10 years, tries to adhere to
diet – drinks about 4-5 diet sodas/day.
Insomnia – takes Tylenol PM. Constipation.
Physical: hard stool in vault
UA: 2+ glucose
(and Hgb A1C = 9.8 one month ago)
PVR: 200 mL
Patient Case
75
year old man
Frequent voiding and weekly urge incontinence
Work up
Hx: Otherwise negative
Physical: unremarkable
UA: normal
PVR: 45 mL
Diagnosis?
Treatment options?
First Line Treatments
Medications
Anticholinergics
– generic, Ditropan XL, Oxytrol patch
Tolterodine - Detrol
Solifenacin - VESIcare
Trospium - Sanctura
Darifenacin - Enablex
Alpha blocker for BPH
Oxybutynin
Other
treatments
Behavioral
training – try BEFORE or with drug
Least Invasive – Use First !!
Diet & Fluid
Management
Behavioral
Strategies
PFM Training
and Exercise
Behavioral
Approaches
Bladder Training
Biofeedback
Weight Loss
Bladder
Diaries
Behavioral Treatment:
Multi-component Program
Pelvic
floor muscle training
Home
practice of exercises
Increase
Bladder
duration of contraction/relaxation over time
Control Techniques
Self-Monitoring
w/ bladder diaries
When the Urge Strikes –
Freeze and Squeeze
Stop
and stay still
Squeeze
Relax
pelvic floor muscles
rest of body
Concentrate
on suppressing urge
Wait
until the urge subsides
Walk
to bathroom at normal pace
Burgio et al. Staying Dry: A Practical Guide to Bladder Control. 1989.
When to Void
Worst
Time
Best
Time
Worst
Time
Calm
Period
Burgio et al. Staying Dry: A Practical Guide to Bladder Control. 1989.
Other Behavioral Strategies
Stress Strategy
Squeeze before you sneeze
(or cough or lift)
Post Void Dribbling Strategy
Squeeze after voiding
RCT Comparing
Behavior and Drug Therapy
197 older women with urge incontinence
Randomized to 8 weeks of:
Behavioral training (biofeedback)
Drug therapy (oxybutynin)
Placebo control
Burgio et al, JAMA, 1998
Reduction of Incontinence
100
% Reduction
80
81%
60
68%
40
39%
20
0
Behavioral
Drug
Control
Patient Satisfaction with Treatment
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
Behavior
Drug
Placebo
78%
49%
28%
Completely satisfied
Burgio et al. JAMA. 1998; 280:1995-2000
Patient Case
85
year old woman
Frequently leaks on the way to the bathroom
Work up
Hx:
Aricept for dementia
Physical: Frail, walks slowly,
uses a walker
UA: normal
PVR: 85 mL
Diagnosis?
Treatment
Options?
The Patient with
Functional Limitations
Avoid
anticholinergic drugs in pts with dementia
Facilitate functional status
Mobility devices
Physical therapy
Bedside commode
Urinal for men
Prompted voiding – VERY effective
Post-Prostatectomy Incontinence
65
yo had radical prostatectomy 1 year ago
Leaks when he coughs, sneezes or lifts
something heavy
Wears a pad in the daytime, dry at night
No problem making it to the bathroom
Diagnosis?
Treatment Options?
Behavioral Treatment of PostProstatectomy Incontinence
20
men; 55-87 years old
Average 2 ½ years since surgery
8 weeks of biofeedback-assisted behavioral
training
78.3% decrease in accidents
(range of -12 – 100%)
Burgio, et.al., J Urology, 1989
Behavioral Training for PostProstatectomy Incontinence
Case Series of 27 men with persistent postprostatectomy UI
Taught pelvic floor muscle exercises without
using biofeedback
56.6% reduction in leakage
Meaglia et al. J Urol. 1990;144:674
Post-Prostatectomy Incontinence
65 yo considering
radical prostatectomy
Continent
Read that 72% of patients reported
incontinence persisting 1 year after surgery
and 40% wearing pads
What can he do to help prevent incontinence?
Stanford, et.al. JAMA, 2000
Pre-Prostatectomy Muscle Training
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
N=125
(p = .032)
prevention
control
0
50
100
150
Time in Days until Continent
200
Burgio, Goode, et al, J Urol, 175:196; 2006
Reduction of Incontinence
%
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
p=.090
p=.045
73
52
54
32
Pad Use
Burgio, Goode, et.al., J Urology, 2006
Proportion Dry
Days
Pre-Prostatectomy Muscle Training
Median
Time to Continence:
Intervention Group - 3.5 months
Control Group - > 6 month
Number
Needed to Treat to get 1 additional
man out of pads at 6 months = 5
Burgio, Goode, et al, J Urol, 175:196; 2006
Summary - Work-up of Incontinence
History
Physical
Urinalysis
Post-void
Residual Volume
Summary: Contributors to
Incontinence to Treat First
Drugs and Diet
Infection
Atrophic Urethritis
Psychological - Depression, Delirium
Endocrine - Diabetes, Hypercalcemia
Restricted Mobility
Stool Impaction
Urinary Incontinence Treatments
Behavioral
Treatments
Pelvic
Floor Muscle
Exercises (Kegel)
Bladder
Bladder
Control
Techniques
Biofeedback
Pessary
Pelvic
training
Timed/Prompted
Medications
voiding
Floor Electrical
Stimulation
Magnetic
Urethral
Surgery
Chair
Bulking Agents
Current Studies at Bham/ATL GRECC
MOTIVE
- Combined medication and behavioral therapy
for overactive bladder in men (VA Rehab R&D)
– Behavioral therapy with and without
biofeedback and electrical stimulation for persistent
incontinence in men after radical prostatectomy (NIH)
ProsTech
COMBO
- Combined medication and behavioral therapy
for urge incontinence in women (VA Rehab R&D)
– Behavioral therapy or pessary or combined for
stress incontinence in women (NIH)
ATLAS
RUBI
- Botox injections for refractory urge incontinence
in women (NIH)
Contact Information
Patricia Goode, MD
[email protected]
205-934-3249
Kathryn Burgio, PhD
[email protected]
205-558-7067
Ken Shay, DDS, MS
[email protected]
734-222-4325
http://vaww.sites.lrn.va.gov/vacatalog/cu_detail.asp?id=22318