Visco A G, Weidner A C, Cundiff G W, Bump R C
Division of Gynecologic Specialties, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1999 Dec;181(6):1392-4. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9378(99)70381-9.
Our purpose was to determine patient compliance with a telephone-based retraining program.
This was a retrospective study of 123 women with urinary urgency or urge incontinence who were offered bladder retraining with facsimile machine submission of a retraining diary and weekly telephone feedback.
Completion was defined as having >/=4 follow-up sessions and >/=6 weeks of retraining. Seventy-one percent (87/123) began the retraining program; 63% (55/87) of them completed it, for an overall compliance rate of 45% (55/123). When we compared those who completed retraining with those who started but did not complete it, only concurrent use of pharmacologic therapy was significantly different (87% vs 53%, respectively; P <.001). This difference remained significant after we controlled for other independent variables, including urodynamic diagnosis and physician.
A total of 55% of women to whom telephone-based bladder retraining was recommended either never started or were noncompliant with the treatment. Bladder retraining success in the "real world" may be substantially lower than that described in well-funded labor-intensive clinical trials.