Title: Urinary Incontinence
1Urinary Incontinence
Mixed
Urge
Stress
Jan Busby-Whitehead, MD Chief, Division of
Geriatric Medicine University of North
Carolina
2Definition of Urinary Incontinence
The involuntary loss of urine which is
objectively demonstrable and a social or
hygienic problem.
The International Continence Society
3URINARY INCONTINENCE
4Prevalence
- Community 17 older men, up to 30 older women
- Hospital up to 50 older men and women
- LTCF 50-70 older men and women
5Prevalence of Incontinence in Women
Hunskaar, et.al., Int Urogynecol J, 2000
6Prevalence of Incontinencein Community-Dwelling
Women
Hunskaar, et.al., Int Urogynecol J, 2000
7Reversible causes of UI
D
- Delirium or Drugs -
Restricted mobility - Infection,
impaction - Polyuria
R
I
P
8Drugs Contributing to UI
9Bladder Anatomy
- Hollow, distensible, muscula organ
- Reservoir of urine
- Capacity 600 mL
- Desire 200 mL
- Normal void 300 mL
- Organ of excretion
- Behind symphysis pubis
- Female against anterior wall of uterus
- Trigone
- Sphincter
10Physiology
11Aging Changes
- Decreased bladder capacity
- Reduced voiding volume
- Reduced flow rates
- Increased urine production at night
- Nordling, J Experimental Gerontology, 2002,
37991
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13Stress UI
Abrams P et al. Urology. 20036137-49.
- The complaint of involuntary leakage with effort
or exertion or on sneezing or coughing
Sudden increase in abdominal pressure
Urethral pressure
14Urge UI
- Abrams P et al. Urology. 20036137-49. Ouslander
J. N Engl J Med. 2004350(8)786-799.
The complaint of involuntary leakage
accompanied by or immediately preceded by urgency
15Overactive bladder
- Includes urinary urgency with or without urge
incontinence, urinary frequency, and nocturia - Associated with involuntary contractions of the
detrusor muscle
16Mixed UI
Abrams P et al. Urology. 20036137-49. Chaliha
C et al. Urology. 20046351-57.
- The complaint of involuntary leakage associated
with urgency and also with exertion, effort,
sneezing, or coughing
17Overflow
- Urethral blockage
- The Bladder is not able
- to empty properly
Neurogenic/Atonic
Obstruction
18Functional Incontinence
- Immobility
- Diminished vision
- Aphasia
- Environment
- Psychological
19Clinical Questions
- How do you evaluate for incontinence?
- Are behavioral techniques effective? For which
patients? - What drug treatments are useful and how do you
use them?
20Office Evaluation of UI
- Identify presence of UI
- Assess for reversible causes and treat
- If UI persistent, determine type and initiate
treatment - Identify patient who needs further evaluation and
referral
21Basic Evaluation of UI
- History Bladder diary
- Physical examination, especially Genitourinary
and Neurological - Bladder stress test
- Postvoid residual
- Urinalysis, urine culture if indicated
- BUN, creatinine, fasting glucose
22Referral Criteria
- Recurrent urinary tract infections
- Hematuria
- Elevated postvoid residual or other
- evidence of possible obstruction
- Recent gynecological or urological
- surgery or pelvic radiation
- Failed treatment of stress or urge UI
23Cystometry
- Gold standard for diagnosis
- New definition for detrusor overactivity Any
rise in detrusor pressure during filling
cystometry associated with symptoms and not
related to abnormal bladder compliance - Provocative stimuli
- Ambulatory monitoring
24Treatment Options
- Behavioral
- Pharmacological
- Functional Electrical Stimulation
- Surgery
25Are behavioral techniques effective? For whom?
- Behavioral techniques are effective for treatment
of stress and urge UI, and overactive bladder,
but generally do not cure - Behavioral techniques are effective in community
dwelling men and women - Behavioral techniques are most appropriate for
cognitively intact, motivated persons
26Behavioral Treatments for UI
27Self Management
- Fluid Intake
- Dont reduce amount
- Do not drink fluids 2 hr before bedtime
- Avoid caffeine, alcohol, nicotine
28Scheduled Voiding
- Scheduled voiding with systematic delay of
voiding - Schedule based on time interval pt can manage in
daytime - Void at scheduled time even if urge not present
suppress urge if not time with Quick Kegels - Increase voiding interval by 30 min each week
until continent for up to 4 hr
29Pelvic Muscle Exercises
- Isolation of the pelvic muscles
- Avoidance of abdominal, buttock or thigh muscle
contractions - Moderate repetitions of strongest contraction
possible - Ability to hold contraction 10 seconds, repeat in
groups of 10-30 TID
30Efficacy of Behavioral Treatment
PMFE Without Biofeedback
PMFE With Biofeedback
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
98
91
50
38
Range of Improvement
Range of Improvement
31Randomized Trials of Behavioral Treatment for
Stress UI
- 24 RCTs, but only 11 of high quality
- Pelvic floor exercises were effective (up to
75)in reducing symptoms of stress UI - Limited evidence for high vs low intensity
- Benefits of adding biofeedback unclear
- Berghmans et al. Br J Urol 199882181-191
32Behavioral Treatment for Urge/OAB
- Bladder training
- Initial approach
- 3 RCT 47-90 cure rate with 6 mo f/u
- Recurrence in 43-58 after 2-3 yr
- 35 fewer UI episodes vs controls Cochrane
Review 2004
33Limitations of Behavioral Treatment Studies
- Studies varied in
- types of UI
- characteristics of subjects
- intervention strategies
- outcome measures used
- duration of follow-up
- Few studies compared the efficacy of PFME
performed with and without biofeedback
34NIH Treatment Trial
Kincade, Dougherty, Busby-Whitehead
- Purpose
- Compare pelvic floor muscle exercises alone to
PFME plus biofeedback in women with stress and
mixed urge and stress UI - Design
- 315 women randomized to 3 groups, including an
attention control group - Followup up at 2 weeks, 6 months, 1 year
35Drug Treatment for UI What Works
- Stress UI
- Alpha adrenergic agents?
- Estrogen?
- Combination therapy?
36Alpha Adrenergic Drugs
- Phenylpropanoloamine
- Once a first line drug
- 8 randomized controlled trials
- Study duration 2-6 weeks
- cure 0-14
- side effects 5-33
- WITHDRAWN FROM MARKET due to report of
hemorrhagic stroke -
37 Duloxetine (Cymbalta)
- FDA application for stress UI withdrawn
- Warning for liver dysfunction, alcohol
38Estrogen
- Combined study with Phenylpropanolamine suggested
improvement in combination - Improves urogenital atrophy
- Heart and Estrogen/Progestin Replacement Study
2001 4 yr, randomized trial, 2763 postmenopausal
women lt80 given combined HRT or placebo for
ischemic heart disease. - 55 had gt1 episode UI/week
- HRT group had worsening stress and urge UI sx
39Drug Treatment of Overactive Bladder
- Anticholinergic Drugs are mainstay
- Oxybutynin IR 2.5-5 mg bid-qid
- Ditropan XL 5-20 mg daily
- Oxytrol patch TDS 3.9 mg 2x/wk
- Tolterodine tartrate IR 1-2 mg bid
- Detrol LA 2-4 mg daily
- New Drugs
- Trospium chloride (Sanctura) 20 mg bid
- Darifenicin (Enablex) 7.5-15 mg daily
- Solefenicin (Vesicare) 5-10 mg daily
40Muscarinic Receptors
- M1 Brain (cortex, hippocampus), salivary
- glands, sympathetic ganglia
- M2 Heart, hindbrain, smooth muscle (80 of
- detrusor)
- M3 Smooth muscle (20 of detrusor), salivary
- glands, brain, eye (lens, iris)
- M4 Brain (forebrain, striatum)
- M5 Brain (substantia nigra), eye
41Hepatic metabolism
- Oxybutynin CYP 3A4
- Tolterodine CYP 3A4, CYP 2D6
- Darifenacin CYP 3A4, CYP 2D6
- Solifenacin CYP 3A4
- CYP 3A4 Interactions with macrolides,
ketoconazole, nefazadone - CYP 2D6 interactions with TCAs, fluoxetine
42Behavioral vs Drug Rx for Urge UI in Older Women
- Randomized, controlled trial by Burgio et al JAMA
1998 280 1995-2000 - 197 women aged 55-92
- 8 weeks of BFB, 8 weeks of oxybutynin
- 2.5 to 5 mg qd to tid, or placebo control
- All 3 groups reduced UI frequency
- Effectiveness BFBgtdruggtplacebo
43Burgio et al JAMA 1998 2801995-2000
Oxybutynin vs Behavioral Treatment for Urge UI
44Oxybutynin
- Both anticholinergic and smooth muscle relaxant
properties - 6/7 RCTs show benefit
- 15-58 greater reduction in urge UI than placebo
- Dose 2.5 -5 mg qd-qid, 20 mg/d maximum
45Oxybutynin Controlled Release
- Once daily dosing
- RCT showed rate of daytime continence similar to
that for immediate release (53 vs 58) - Lower rate of dry mouth than immediate release
form
46Tolterodine tartrate
- Pure muscarinic receptor antagonist
- Dry mouth most common side effect
- 3 RCT compared tolterodine (2 mg bid) to
oxybutynin (5 mg tid) Equally effective and
superior to placebo - Decreased urge U(I in study of 293 pts47
tolterodine, 71 oxybutynin, 19 placebo, dry
mouth 86 oxybutynin, 50 tolerodine
47OBJECT Study
Appel et al Mayo Clin Proc 200176
- Compared efficacy and tolerability of extended
release oxybutynin and tolterodine tartrate - 12 weeks
- Prospective randomized,double-blind, parallel
group study - 276 women and 56 men
- Oxybutynin more effective for weekly urge UI,
total incontinence, and urinary frequency
48Trospium
- Dose 20 mg bid
- Renal metabolism
- Nonselective for muscarinic receptors
- Effective for detrusor overactivity in
placebo-controlled double-blind studies - Trospium 20 mg bid vs tolterodine 2 mg bid in 232
pts reduced voiding frequency and number of UI
episodes - Dry mouth 7 and 9 respectively
49Darifenicin
- Dose 7.5 to 15 mg daily
- Selective M3 receptor antagonist
- Several RCTs
- Mundy et al 2001 Randomized double-blind trial
compared darifenacin 15 mg and 30 mg to
oxybutynin 5 mg tid in 25 pts , similar efficacy - Side effects Dry mouth, constipation(lt2)
50Solefenacin
- Dose 5 to 10 mg daily
- Long acting muscarinic receptor antagonist,
selective for M3 - Undergoes hepatic metabolism involving cytochrom
P450 -
- Several multinational trials with over 800 pts,
vs placebo, showed efficacy low side effects (2
dry mouth)
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52Desmopressin
- Decreases urine production
- Helps nocturia
- Dose 20-40 mcg intranasal spray q hs
- Double-blind crossover trial showed decreased
nighttime voids vs placebo, 1.9 vs 2.6 - Contraindications CHF, HTN, ASCVD
53Functional Electrical Stimulation
- Frequency of 10-50 Hertz for 15-20 minutes daily
- RCT 50 cured after 8 weeks compared to sham
controls - 52-77 symptomatic improvement in short-term
studies, non RCT - Implantable electrodes at S2-3, 76 improvement
for refractory urge UI x 18 mo - BUT 33 required surgical revision
54Surgery for Urge/OAB
- If behavioral and pharmacological treatments
dont work - Augmentation enterocystoplasty
- One series of 267 patients had a 93 continence
rate with 3 yr f/u - Complications urinary retention, stones, small
bowel obstruction, reservoir rupture
55Treatment of Overflow UI Due to Mild BPH
- Alpha adrenergic antagonists
- Possibly relaxes prostate smooth muscle and
stroma and urethra smooth muscle to increase
urine flow - Tamsulosin, doxazosin, terazosin
- Tamsulosin trials 53 weeks, 31 and 36
improvement in maximal flow rate with 0.4mg and
0.8 mg/day vs 21 placebo - Uroselective alfuzosin in late stage clinical
trials
56Drug Treatment of Mild BPH
- Type II 5 alpha reductase inhibitor
- Results in atrophy of the prostatic glandular
epithelium due to decreased synthesis of
dihydrotestosterone - Slow onset, 20-30 reduction in prostate volume
and LUTS over time - Side effects Ejaculatory dysfunction (8), loss
of libido (10), erectile dysfunction (16) - Finasteride , Dutasteride
57Summary
- Behavioral treatment is effective for treating
stress and urge UI and OAB - Drugs are effective for treating urge UI and OAB
and mild BPH - New selective agents for urge and OAB based on
new understanding of bladder and urethral
function - Caution needed in dosing, especially in older
patients