Neumann Patricia B, Grimmer Karen A, Deenadayalan Yamini
School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
BMC Womens Health. 2006 Jun 28;6:11. doi: 10.1186/1472-6874-6-11.
Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is a prevalent and costly condition which may be treated surgically or by physical therapy. The aim of this review was to systematically assess the literature and present the best available evidence for the efficacy and effectiveness of pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) performed alone and together with adjunctive therapies (eg biofeedback, electrical stimulation, vaginal cones) for the treatment of female SUI.
All major electronic sources of relevant information were systematically searched to identify peer-reviewed English language abstracts or papers published between 1995 and 2005. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and other study designs eg non-randomised trials, cohort studies, case series, were considered for this review in order to source all the available evidence relevant to clinical practice. Studies of adult women with a urodynamic or clinical diagnosis of SUI were eligible for inclusion. Excluded were studies of women who were pregnant, immediately post-partum or with a diagnosis of mixed or urge incontinence. Studies with a PFMT protocol alone and in combination with adjunctive physical therapies were considered. Two independent reviewers assessed the eligibility of each study, its level of evidence and the methodological quality. Due to the heterogeneity of study designs, the results are presented in narrative format.
Twenty four studies, including 17 RCTs and seven non-RCTs, met the inclusion criteria. The methodological quality of the studies varied but lower quality scores did not necessarily indicate studies from lower levels of evidence. This review found consistent evidence from a number of high quality RCTs that PFMT alone and in combination with adjunctive therapies is effective treatment for women with SUI with rates of 'cure' and 'cure/improvement' up to 73% and 97% respectively. The contribution of adjunctive therapies is unclear and there is limited evidence about treatment outcomes in primary care settings.
There is strong evidence for the efficacy of physical therapy for the treatment for SUI in women but further high quality studies are needed to evaluate the optimal treatment programs and training protocols in subgroups of women and their effectiveness in clinical practice.
压力性尿失禁(SUI)是一种常见且代价高昂的病症,可通过手术或物理治疗进行治疗。本综述的目的是系统评估文献,并提供关于单独进行盆底肌训练(PFMT)以及与辅助疗法(如生物反馈、电刺激、阴道球)联合使用治疗女性SUI的疗效和有效性的最佳现有证据。
系统检索了所有主要的相关信息电子来源,以识别1995年至2005年间发表的经同行评审的英文摘要或论文。本综述考虑了随机对照试验(RCT)和其他研究设计,如非随机试验、队列研究、病例系列,以便获取与临床实践相关的所有现有证据。有尿动力学或临床诊断为SUI的成年女性研究符合纳入标准。排除了孕妇、产后即刻或诊断为混合性或急迫性尿失禁的女性研究。考虑了单独使用PFMT方案以及与辅助物理疗法联合使用的研究。两名独立评审员评估了每项研究的纳入资格、证据水平和方法学质量。由于研究设计的异质性,结果以叙述形式呈现。
24项研究,包括17项RCT和7项非RCT,符合纳入标准。研究的方法学质量各不相同,但质量得分较低并不一定表明证据水平较低的研究。本综述从多项高质量RCT中发现了一致的证据,即单独进行PFMT以及与辅助疗法联合使用对SUI女性是有效的治疗方法,“治愈”和“治愈/改善”率分别高达73%和97%。辅助疗法的作用尚不清楚,关于初级保健环境中治疗结果的证据有限。
有强有力的证据表明物理治疗对女性SUI的治疗有效,但需要进一步的高质量研究来评估女性亚组中的最佳治疗方案和训练方案及其在临床实践中的有效性。