Black N A, Bowling A, Griffiths J M, Pope C, Abel P D
Health Services Research Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1998 Jun;105(6):605-12. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.1998.tb10174.x.
To assess the feasibility of collecting disease-specific and generic data on the impact of surgery on the social lives of women with stress incontinence; to describe the social impact of surgery in a representative group; and to determine the effect of timing on the assessment of outcome.
Longitudinal study; questionnaires before and three, six, and twelve months after surgery.
Eighteen hospitals in North Thames region.
Four hundred and forty-two women undergoing surgery for stress incontinence between January 1993 and June 1994.
Post-operative recovery time, stress incontinence symptom impact index, activities of daily living, and cost of protection.
Post-operative recovery was uneventful for most women, but three months after surgery 24% of those in paid employment beforehand were still on sick or unpaid leave. Most women (75%) reported that stress incontinence had less adverse impact on their lives three months after surgery, though 18% reported no change, and 7% felt life was worse. The likelihood of improvement was similar regardless of whether pre-operative urodynamic studies had been conducted. The extent of improvement was dependent on pre-operative severity. Similar findings were obtained six and twelve months after surgery. After an initial slight but nonsignificant deterioration in their ability to carry out activities of daily living, women gained a slight benefit from surgery (proportion with no or only slight limitation rose from 72% to 82%; P=0.0001). The mean cost of protection (pads and towels) fell from 8.59 pound sterling a month before surgery to 2.99 pound sterling a month one year after surgery, by which time 68% of women were not using protection. In contrast, 11% were still spending over 10 pound sterling a month.
It is possible to collect standard data on the impact of surgery on social functioning and, thus, provide women with better information on likely outcomes. The benefits of pre-operative urodynamic investigations need to be assessed. The stability of the outcome measures over the first post-operative year suggest that outcomes need to be assessed only once and at any time from three to twelve months after the operation.
评估收集关于手术对压力性尿失禁女性社会生活影响的疾病特异性和一般性数据的可行性;描述手术对一组具有代表性女性的社会影响;并确定时间选择对结果评估的影响。
纵向研究;在手术前以及手术后三个月、六个月和十二个月进行问卷调查。
北泰晤士地区的18家医院。
1993年1月至1994年6月期间接受压力性尿失禁手术的442名女性。
术后恢复时间、压力性尿失禁症状影响指数、日常生活活动能力以及防护成本。
大多数女性术后恢复顺利,但术前有带薪工作的女性中,术后三个月仍有24%的人在休病假或无薪假。大多数女性(75%)报告称,术后三个月压力性尿失禁对其生活的不利影响较小,不过18%的人表示没有变化,7%的人觉得生活更糟。无论术前是否进行了尿动力学研究,改善的可能性相似。改善程度取决于术前严重程度。术后六个月和十二个月也得到了类似的结果。在日常生活活动能力最初出现轻微但不显著的下降之后,女性从手术中获得了轻微益处(无或仅有轻微受限的比例从72%升至82%;P = 0.0001)。防护(护垫和毛巾)的平均成本从术前每月8.59英镑降至术后一年的每月2.99英镑,此时68%的女性不再使用防护用品。相比之下,11%的女性每月仍花费超过十英镑。
有可能收集关于手术对社会功能影响的标准数据,从而为女性提供关于可能结果的更好信息。术前尿动力学检查的益处需要评估。术后第一年结果指标的稳定性表明,结果只需在术后三个月至十二个月的任何时间评估一次。