Behavioral therapy to enable women with urge incontinence to discontinue drug treatment: A randomized trial

Kathryn L. Burgio, Stephen R. Kraus, Shawn Menefee, Diane Borello-France, Marlene Corton, Harry W. Johnson, Veronica Mallett, Peggy Norton, Mary P. FitzGerald, Kimberly J. Dandreo, Holly E. Richter, Thomas Rozanski, Michael Albo, Halina M. Zyczynski, Gary E. Lemack, Toby C. Chai, Salil Khandwala, Jan Baker, Linda Brubaker, Anne M. StoddardPatricia S. Goode, Betsy Nielsen-Omeis, Charles W. Nager, Kimberly Kenton, Sharon L. Tennstedt, John W. Kusek, T. Debuene Chang, Leroy M. Nyberg, William Steers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

103 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Women with urge urinary incontinence are commonly treated with antimuscarinic medications, but many discontinue therapy. Objective: To determine whether combining antimuscarinic drug therapy with supervised behavioral training, compared with drug therapy alone, improves the ability of women with urge incontinence to achieve clinically important reductions in incontinence episodes and to sustain these improvements after discontinuing drug therapy. Design: 2-stage, multicenter, randomized clinical trial conducted from July 2004 to January 2006. Setting: 9 university-affiliated outpatient clinics. Patients: 307 women with urge-predominant incontinence. Intervention: 10 weeks of open-label, extended-release tolterodine alone (n = 153) or combined with behavioral training (n = 154), followed by discontinuation of therapy and follow-up at 8 months. Measurements: The primary outcome, measured at 8 months, was no receipt of drugs or other therapy for urge incontinence and a 70% or greater reduction in frequency of incontinence episodes. Secondary outcomes were reduction in incontinence, self-reported satisfaction and improvement, and scores on validated questionnaires measuring symptom distress and bother and health-related quality of life. Study staff who performed outcome evaluations, but not participants and interventionists, were blinded to group assignment. Results: 237 participants completed the trial. According to life-table estimates, the rate of successful discontinuation of therapy at 8 months was the same in the combination therapy and drug therapy alone groups (41% in both groups; difference, 0 percentage points [95% CI, -12 to 12 percentage points]). A higher proportion of participants who received combination therapy than drug therapy alone achieved a 70% or greater reduction in incontinence at 10 weeks (69% vs. 58%; difference, 11 percentage points [CI, -0.3 to 22.1 percentage points]). Combination therapy yielded better outcomes over time on the Urogenital Distress Inventory and the Overactive Bladder Questionnaire (both P <0.001) at both time points for patient satisfaction and perceived improvement but not health-related quality of life. Adverse events were uncommon (12 events in 6 participants [3 in each group]). Limitations: Behavioral therapy components (daily bladder diary and recommendations for fluid management) in the group receiving drug therapy alone may have attenuated between-group differences. Assigned treatment was completed by 68% of participants, whereas 8-month outcome status was assessed on 77%. Conclusion: The addition of behavioral training to drug therapy may reduce incontinence frequency during active treatment but does not improve the ability to discontinue drug therapy and maintain improvement in urinary incontinence. Combination therapy has a beneficial effect on patient satisfaction, perceived improvement, and reduction of other bladder symptoms.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)161-169
Number of pages9
JournalAnnals of internal medicine
Volume149
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 5 2008

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Internal Medicine

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