Wieland L Susan, Shrestha Nipun, Lassi Zohra S, Panda Sougata, Chiaramonte Delia, Skoetz Nicole
Center for Integrative Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 520 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, Maryland, USA, 21201.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Feb 28;2(2):CD012668. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012668.pub2.
Urinary incontinence in women is associated with poor quality of life and difficulties in social, psychological and sexual functioning. The condition may affect up to 15% of middle-aged or older women in the general population. Conservative treatments such as lifestyle interventions, bladder training and pelvic floor muscle training (used either alone or in combination with other interventions) are the initial approaches to the management of urinary incontinence. Many women are interested in additional treatments such as yoga, a system of philosophy, lifestyle and physical practice that originated in ancient India.
To assess the effects of yoga for treating urinary incontinence in women.
We searched the Cochrane Incontinence and Cochrane Complementary Medicine Specialised Registers. We searched the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (WHO ICTRP) and ClinicalTrials.gov to identify any ongoing or unpublished studies. We handsearched Proceedings of the International Congress on Complementary Medicine Research and the European Congress for Integrative Medicine. We searched the NHS Economic Evaluation Database for economic studies, and supplemented this search with searches for economics studies in MEDLINE and Embase from 2015 onwards. Database searches are up-to-date as of 21 June 2018.
Randomised controlled trials in women diagnosed with urinary incontinence in which one group was allocated to treatment with yoga.
Two review authors independently screened titles and abstracts of all retrieved articles, selected studies for inclusion, extracted data, assessed risk of bias and evaluated the certainty of the evidence for each reported outcome. Any disagreements were resolved by consensus. We planned to combine clinically comparable studies in Review Manager 5 using random-effects meta-analysis and to carry out sensitivity and subgroup analyses. We planned to create a table listing economic studies on yoga for incontinence but not carry out any analyses on these studies.
We included two studies (involving a total of 49 women). Each study compared yoga to a different comparator, therefore we were unable to combine the data in a meta-analysis. A third study that has been completed but not yet fully reported is awaiting assessment.One included study was a six-week study comparing yoga to a waiting list in 19 women with either urgency urinary incontinence or stress urinary incontinence. We judged the certainty of the evidence for all reported outcomes as very low due to performance bias, detection bias, and imprecision. The number of women reporting cure was not reported. We are uncertain whether yoga results in satisfaction with cure or improvement of incontinence (risk ratio (RR) 6.33, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.44 to 27.88; an increase of 592 from 111 per 1000, 95% CI 160 to 1000). We are uncertain whether there is a difference between yoga and waiting list in condition-specific quality of life as measured on the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire Short Form (mean difference (MD) 1.74, 95% CI -33.02 to 36.50); the number of micturitions (MD -0.77, 95% CI -2.13 to 0.59); the number of incontinence episodes (MD -1.57, 95% CI -2.83 to -0.31); or the bothersomeness of incontinence as measured on the Urogenital Distress Inventory 6 (MD -0.90, 95% CI -1.46 to -0.34). There was no evidence of a difference in the number of women who experienced at least one adverse event (risk difference 0%, 95% CI -38% to 38%; no difference from 222 per 1000, 95% CI 380 fewer to 380 more).The second included study was an eight-week study in 30 women with urgency urinary incontinence that compared mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) to an active control intervention of yoga classes. The study was unblinded, and there was high attrition from both study arms for all outcome assessments. We judged the certainty of the evidence for all reported outcomes as very low due to performance bias, attrition bias, imprecision and indirectness. The number of women reporting cure was not reported. We are uncertain whether women in the yoga group were less likely to report improvement in incontinence at eight weeks compared to women in the MBSR group (RR 0.09, 95% CI 0.01 to 1.43; a decrease of 419 from 461 per 1000, 95% CI 5 to 660). We are uncertain about the effect of MBSR compared to yoga on reports of cure or improvement in incontinence, improvement in condition-specific quality of life measured on the Overactive Bladder Health-Related Quality of Life Scale, reduction in incontinence episodes or reduction in bothersomeness of incontinence as measured on the Overactive Bladder Symptom and Quality of Life-Short Form at eight weeks. The study did not report on adverse effects.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We identified few trials on yoga for incontinence, and the existing trials were small and at high risk of bias. In addition, we did not find any studies of economic outcomes related to yoga for urinary incontinence. Due to the lack of evidence to answer the review question, we are uncertain whether yoga is useful for women with urinary incontinence. Additional, well-conducted trials with larger sample sizes are needed.
女性尿失禁与生活质量差以及社交、心理和性功能方面的困难有关。在普通人群中,该疾病可能影响高达15%的中年或老年女性。保守治疗,如生活方式干预、膀胱训练和盆底肌肉训练(单独使用或与其他干预措施联合使用)是管理尿失禁的初始方法。许多女性对其他治疗方法感兴趣,如瑜伽,这是一种起源于古印度的哲学、生活方式和身体练习体系。
评估瑜伽治疗女性尿失禁的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane尿失禁和Cochrane补充医学专业注册库。我们检索了世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台(WHO ICTRP)和ClinicalTrials.gov,以识别任何正在进行或未发表的研究。我们手工检索了补充医学研究国际大会和欧洲综合医学大会的会议记录。我们检索了NHS经济评估数据库以查找经济研究,并从2015年起在MEDLINE和Embase中搜索经济研究对该检索进行补充。数据库检索截至2018年6月21日。
对诊断为尿失禁的女性进行的随机对照试验,其中一组被分配接受瑜伽治疗。
两位综述作者独立筛选所有检索文章的标题和摘要,选择纳入研究,提取数据,评估偏倚风险并评估每个报告结局的证据确定性。任何分歧通过共识解决。我们计划在Review Manager 5中使用随机效应荟萃分析合并临床可比研究,并进行敏感性和亚组分析。我们计划创建一个表格列出关于瑜伽治疗尿失禁的经济研究,但不对这些研究进行任何分析。
我们纳入了两项研究(共涉及49名女性)。每项研究将瑜伽与不同的对照进行比较,因此我们无法在荟萃分析中合并数据。第三项已完成但尚未完全报告的研究正在等待评估。一项纳入研究是一项为期六周的研究,将19名患有急迫性尿失禁或压力性尿失禁的女性的瑜伽与等待名单进行比较。由于实施偏倚、检测偏倚和不精确性,我们将所有报告结局的证据确定性判断为非常低。报告治愈的女性人数未报告。我们不确定瑜伽是否会导致对治愈的满意度或尿失禁的改善(风险比(RR)6.33,95%置信区间(CI)1.44至27.88;每1000人增加592人,95%CI为160至1000)。我们不确定在使用尿失禁影响问卷简表测量的特定疾病生活质量方面,瑜伽与等待名单之间是否存在差异(平均差(MD)1.74,95%CI -33.02至36.50);排尿次数(MD -0.77,95%CI -2.13至0.59);尿失禁发作次数(MD -1.57,95%CI -2.83至-0.31);或使用泌尿生殖系统困扰量表6测量的尿失禁困扰程度(MD -0.90,95%CI -1.46至-0.34)。没有证据表明经历至少一次不良事件的女性人数存在差异(风险差0%,95%CI -38%至38%;与每1000人222人无差异,95%CI少380人至多380人)。第二项纳入研究是一项为期八周的研究,对30名患有急迫性尿失禁的女性进行,将基于正念的减压疗法(MBSR)与瑜伽课程的积极对照干预进行比较。该研究未设盲,并且在所有结局评估中两个研究组的失访率都很高。由于实施偏倚、失访偏倚、不精确性和间接性,我们将所有报告结局的证据确定性判断为非常低。报告治愈的女性人数未报告。我们不确定与MBSR组相比,瑜伽组女性在八周时报告尿失禁改善的可能性是否更低(RR 0.09,95%CI 0.01至1.43;每1000人减少419人,95%CI为5至660)。我们不确定与瑜伽相比,MBSR对八周时尿失禁治愈或改善的报告、使用膀胱过度活动症健康相关生活质量量表测量的特定疾病生活质量改善、尿失禁发作次数减少或使用膀胱过度活动症症状和生活质量简表测量的尿失禁困扰程度降低的影响。该研究未报告不良反应。
我们发现关于瑜伽治疗尿失禁的试验很少,现有试验规模小且偏倚风险高。此外,我们未找到任何与瑜伽治疗尿失禁相关的经济结局研究。由于缺乏证据来回答综述问题,我们不确定瑜伽对患有尿失禁的女性是否有用。需要进行更多样本量更大、实施良好的试验。