Health Services Research Unit, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, UK.
Lancet. 2011 Jul 23;378(9788):328-37. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60751-4. Epub 2011 Jul 7.
Urinary incontinence is common immediately after prostate surgery. Men are often advised to do pelvic-floor exercises, but evidence to support this is inconclusive. Our aim was to establish if formal one-to-one pelvic floor muscle training reduces incontinence.
We undertook two randomised trials in men in the UK who were incontinent 6 weeks after radical prostatectomy (trial 1) or transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP; trial 2) to compare four sessions with a therapist over 3 months with standard care and lifestyle advice only. Randomisation was by remote computer allocation. Our primary endpoints, collected via postal questionnaires, were participants' reports of urinary incontinence and incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) after 12 months. Group assignment was masked from outcome assessors, but this masking was not possible for participants or caregivers. We used intention-to-treat analyses to compare the primary outcome at 12 months. This study is registered, number ISRCTN87696430.
In the intervention group in trial 1, the rate of urinary incontinence at 12 months (148 [76%] of 196) was not significantly different from the control group (151 [77%] of 195; absolute risk difference [RD] -1·9%, 95% CI -10 to 6). In trial 2, the difference in the rate of urinary incontinence at 12 months (126 [65%] of 194) from the control group was not significant (125 [62%] of 203; RD 3·4%, 95% CI -6 to 13). Adjusting for minimisation factors or doing treatment-received analyses did not change these results in either trial. No adverse effects were reported. In both trials, the intervention resulted in higher mean costs per patient (£180 and £209 respectively) but we did not identify evidence of an economically important difference in QALYs (0·002 [95% CI -0·027 to 0·023] and -0·00003 [-0·026 to 0·026]).
In settings where information about pelvic-floor exercise is widely available, one-to-one conservative physical therapy for men who are incontinent after prostate surgery is unlikely to be effective or cost effective. The high rates of persisting incontinence after 12 months suggest a substantial unrecognised and unmet need for management in these men.
National Institute of Health Research, Health Technology Assessment (NIHR HTA) Programme.
前列腺手术后,尿失禁是常见的。男性常被建议进行盆底肌锻炼,但支持这一建议的证据并不明确。我们的目的是确定是否进行一对一的盆底肌肉训练可以减少尿失禁。
我们在英国进行了两项随机试验,试验对象为前列腺根治术后 6 周(试验 1)或经尿道前列腺切除术(TURP;试验 2)后出现尿失禁的男性,比较了 3 个月内 4 次与治疗师的一对一治疗与仅接受标准护理和生活方式建议的效果。随机分配由远程计算机进行。我们通过邮寄问卷收集的主要终点是参与者报告的尿失禁情况以及 12 个月后的增量成本每质量调整生命年(QALY)。组分配对结果评估者是盲态的,但对参与者或护理人员则无法保持盲态。我们使用意向治疗分析比较了 12 个月时的主要结局。该研究已注册,编号 ISRCTN87696430。
在试验 1 的干预组中,12 个月时尿失禁的发生率(196 例中有 148 例[76%])与对照组(195 例中有 151 例[77%])无显著差异(绝对差异[RD]-1.9%,95%CI-10 至 6)。在试验 2 中,12 个月时尿失禁的发生率(194 例中有 126 例[65%])与对照组相比差异无统计学意义(193 例中有 125 例[62%])(RD3.4%,95%CI-6 至 13)。调整最小化因素或进行治疗接受分析后,这两个试验的结果均无变化。未报告任何不良反应。在两个试验中,干预措施均导致每位患者的平均费用增加(分别为 180 英镑和 209 英镑),但我们没有发现 QALY(0.002[95%CI-0.027 至 0.023]和-0.00003[-0.026 至 0.026])方面有经济上重要的差异。
在信息广泛提供盆底肌锻炼的情况下,对前列腺手术后尿失禁的男性进行一对一的保守物理治疗不太可能有效或具有成本效益。12 个月后持续存在的高尿失禁率表明,这些男性的管理存在大量未被认识和未满足的需求。
英国国家卫生研究院,健康技术评估(NIHR HTA)计划。