Bishoff J T, Motley G, Optenberg S A, Stein C R, Moon K A, Browning S M, Sabanegh E, Foley J P, Thompson I M
Department of Urology, Brooke Army Medical Center, San Antonio, Texas, USA.
J Urol. 1998 Aug;160(2):454-8.
Since 1991 we have performed more than 300 anatomical radical perineal prostatectomies at Brooke Army and Wilford Hall Medical Centers, and were initially aware of 8 patients who presented with unsolicited postoperative fecal incontinence. We determined the incidence of fecal and urinary incontinence following radical prostatectomy, defined parameters to identify patients at risk for fecal complaints following radical prostatectomy, and estimated the impact of fecal incontinence on lifestyle and activities.
Initially a validated 26-question telephone survey was used to evaluate 227 patients who had previously undergone radical prostatectomy at 1 of our 2 institutions. Based on results of the telephone survey a national survey was mailed to 1,200 radical prostatectomy patients randomly selected from a nationwide database of Department of Defense health care system beneficiaries. All patients had undergone radical perineal or retropubic prostatectomy at least 12 months before being contacted for the survey.
Responses to the telephone survey from 227 patients revealed that fecal incontinence was a problem after radical retropubic (5%) and perineal (18%) prostatectomy and less than 50% of those with fecal incontinence had told the physician. Our mail survey (response rate 80% and 78% usable for analysis, 784 radical perineal and 123 perineal) strongly indicated that fecal incontinence after radical prostatectomy is a problem nationwide. Frequency of fecal incontinence (daily, weekly, monthly or less than monthly occurrences) was significantly higher among radical perineal (3, 9, 3 and 16%) compared to retropubic prostatectomy (2, 5, 3, and 8%) patients (p=0.002). Fecal incontinence had a significant negative effect on patient social or entertainment activities (p=0.029), and travel and vacation plans (p=0.043). Radical perineal compared to retropubic prostatectomy patients were more likely to wear a pad for stool leakage (p=0.013), experienced more accidents (p=0.001), had larger amounts of stool leakage (p=0.002) and had less formed stools (p=0.001). Of radical perineal prostatectomy patients only 14% and of retropubic only 7% with fecal incontinence had ever told a health care provider about it, even when the incontinence was severe. Responses to our survey concerning urinary incontinence showed that radical perineal prostatectomy patients had a lower rate of urinary incontinence immediately after prostatectomy compared to retropubic (79 versus 85%, p=0.043). A higher proportion of perineal patients reported that all urinary leakage had ceased, that is full continence had returned (perineal 70%, retropubic 53%, p=0.001). A smaller proportion of perineal patients found it necessary to wear a pad to protect from urinary incontinence (perineal 39%, retropubic 56%, p=0.004).
Fecal incontinence following radical prostatectomy occurs more frequently than previously recognized. In general fecal incontinence among radical perineal and retropubic prostatectomy patients surpasses the expected incidence rate of 4% for this age group (60 to 70 years) but incidence is significantly higher for radical perineal prostatectomy patients. However, radical perineal prostatectomy patients have a significantly lower incidence of urinary incontinence than those treated with retropubic prostatectomy. Surgeons who perform radical retropubic and perineal prostatectomy should be aware of the possibility of fecal and/or urinary incontinence and associated symptoms.
自1991年以来,我们在布鲁克陆军医疗中心和威尔福德·霍尔医疗中心已实施了300多例解剖性根治性会阴前列腺切除术,最初发现有8例患者术后出现了非主动报告的大便失禁。我们确定了根治性前列腺切除术后大便失禁和尿失禁的发生率,定义了用于识别根治性前列腺切除术后有大便失禁风险患者的参数,并评估了大便失禁对生活方式和活动的影响。
最初,我们使用经过验证的包含26个问题的电话调查问卷,对在我们两家机构之一接受过根治性前列腺切除术的227例患者进行了评估。基于电话调查结果,我们向从国防部医疗保健系统受益人的全国数据库中随机选取的1200例根治性前列腺切除术患者邮寄了全国性调查问卷。所有患者在接受调查前至少12个月都接受过根治性会阴或耻骨后前列腺切除术。
227例患者对电话调查的回复显示,根治性耻骨后前列腺切除术(5%)和根治性会阴前列腺切除术(18%)后存在大便失禁问题,且大便失禁患者中不到50%告知了医生。我们的邮寄调查(回复率为80%,78%可用于分析,784例根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者和123例耻骨后前列腺切除术患者)有力地表明,根治性前列腺切除术后大便失禁在全国范围内都是一个问题。根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者(3%、9%、3%和16%)大便失禁的频率(每日一次、每周一次、每月一次或每月少于一次)明显高于耻骨后前列腺切除术患者(2%、5%、3%和8%)(p = 0.002)。大便失禁对患者的社交或娱乐活动(p = 0.029)以及旅行和度假计划(p = 0.043)有显著负面影响。与耻骨后前列腺切除术患者相比,根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者更有可能使用护垫来防止大便泄漏(p = 0.013),发生更多意外(p = 0.001),大便泄漏量更大(p = 0.002),且成形粪便更少(p = 0.001)。在根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者中,只有14%有大便失禁的患者曾告知医疗服务提供者,在耻骨后前列腺切除术患者中这一比例仅为7%,即使失禁情况严重时也是如此。我们关于尿失禁的调查回复显示,根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者前列腺切除术后立即出现尿失禁的发生率低于耻骨后前列腺切除术患者(79%对85%,p = 0.043)。更高比例的会阴前列腺切除术患者报告所有尿失禁都已停止,即恢复了完全控尿(会阴前列腺切除术患者为70%,耻骨后前列腺切除术患者为53%,p = 0.001)。较小比例的会阴前列腺切除术患者认为有必要使用护垫来防止尿失禁(会阴前列腺切除术患者为39%,耻骨后前列腺切除术患者为56%,p = 0.004)。
根治性前列腺切除术后大便失禁的发生率比之前认为的更高。一般来说,根治性会阴和耻骨后前列腺切除术患者的大便失禁发生率超过了该年龄组(60至70岁)预期的4%的发生率,但根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者的发生率明显更高。然而,根治性会阴前列腺切除术患者的尿失禁发生率明显低于接受耻骨后前列腺切除术的患者。实施根治性耻骨后和会阴前列腺切除术的外科医生应意识到大便失禁和/或尿失禁及相关症状的可能性。