Conservative, physical and surgical interventions for managing faecal incontinence and constipation in adults with central neurological diseases.

IF 8.8 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Claire L Todd, Eugenie E Johnson, Fiona Stewart, Sheila A Wallace, Andrew Bryant, Sue Woodward, Christine Norton
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The review is relevant to individuals with any disease directly and chronically affecting the central nervous system (post-traumatic, degenerative, ischaemic or neoplastic), such as multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, cerebrovascular disease, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease. This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2001 and subsequently updated in 2003, 2006 and 2014.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>To assess the effects of conservative, physical and surgical interventions for managing FI and constipation in people with a neurological disease or injury affecting the central nervous system.</p><p><strong>Search methods: </strong>We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register (searched 27 March 2023), which includes searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP as well as handsearching of journals and conference proceedings; and all reference lists of relevant articles.</p><p><strong>Selection criteria: </strong>We included randomised, quasi-randomised (where allocation is not strictly random), cross-over and cluster-randomised trials evaluating any type of conservative, physical or surgical intervention against placebo, usual care or no intervention for the management of FI and constipation in people with central neurological disease or injury.</p><p><strong>Data collection and analysis: </strong>At least two review authors independently assessed the risk of bias in eligible trials using Cochrane's 'Risk of bias' tool and independently extracted data from the included trials using a range of prespecified outcome measures. We produced summary of findings tables for our main outcome measures and assessed the certainty of the evidence using GRADE.</p><p><strong>Main results: </strong>We included 25 studies with 1598 participants. The studies were generally at high risk of bias due to lack of blinding of participants and personnel to the intervention. Half of the included studies were also at high risk of bias in terms of selective reporting. Outcomes were often reported heterogeneously across studies, making it difficult to pool data. We did not find enough evidence to be able to analyse the effects of interventions on individual central neurological diseases. Additionally, very few studies reported on the primary outcomes of self-reported improvement in FI or constipation, or Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score. Conservative interventions compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo Thirteen studies assessed this comparison. The interventions included assessment-based nursing, holistic nursing, probiotics, psyllium, faecal microbiota transplantation, and a stepwise protocol of increasingly invasive evacuation methods. Conservative interventions may result in a large improvement in faecal incontinence (standardised mean difference (SMD) -1.85, 95% confidence interval (CI) -3.47 to -0.23; 3 studies; n = 410; low-certainty evidence). We interpreted SMD ≥ 0.80 as a large effect. It was not possible to pool all data from studies that assessed improvement in constipation, but the evidence suggested that conservative interventions may improve constipation symptoms (data not pooled; 8 studies; n = 612; low-certainty evidence). Conservative interventions may lead to a reduction in mean time taken on bowel care (data not pooled; 5 studies; n = 526; low-certainty evidence). The evidence is uncertain about the effects of conservative interventions on condition-specific quality of life and adverse events. Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score was not reported. Physical therapy compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo Twelve studies assessed this comparison. The interventions included massage therapy, standing, osteopathic manipulative treatment, electrical stimulation, transanal irrigation, and conventional physical therapy with visceral mobilisation. Physical therapies may make little to no difference to self-reported faecal continence assessed using the St Mark's Faecal Incontinence Score, where the minimally important difference is five, or the Cleveland Constipation Score (MD -2.60, 95% CI -4.91 to -0.29; 3 studies; n = 155; low-certainty evidence). Physical therapies may result in a moderate improvement in constipation symptoms (SMD -0.62, 95% CI -1.10 to -0.14; 9 studies; n = 431; low-certainty evidence). We interpreted SMD ≥ 0.5 as a moderate effect. However, physical therapies may make little to no difference in Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score as the minimally important difference for this tool is 3 (MD -1.94, 95% CI -3.36 to -0.51; 7 studies; n = 358; low-certainty evidence). We are very uncertain about the effects of physical therapies on the time spent on bowel care, condition-specific quality of life and adverse effects (all very low-certainty evidence). Surgical interventions compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo No studies were found for surgical interventions that met the inclusion criteria for this review.</p><p><strong>Authors' conclusions: </strong>There remains little research on this common and, for patients, very significant issue of bowel management. The available evidence is almost uniformly of low methodological quality. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: People with central neurological disease or injury have a much higher risk of both faecal incontinence (FI) and constipation than the general population. There is often a fine line between the two symptoms, with management intended to ameliorate one risking precipitating the other. Bowel problems are observed to be the cause of much anxiety and may reduce quality of life in these people. Current bowel management is largely empirical, with a limited research base. The review is relevant to individuals with any disease directly and chronically affecting the central nervous system (post-traumatic, degenerative, ischaemic or neoplastic), such as multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, cerebrovascular disease, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease. This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2001 and subsequently updated in 2003, 2006 and 2014.

Objectives: To assess the effects of conservative, physical and surgical interventions for managing FI and constipation in people with a neurological disease or injury affecting the central nervous system.

Search methods: We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register (searched 27 March 2023), which includes searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP as well as handsearching of journals and conference proceedings; and all reference lists of relevant articles.

Selection criteria: We included randomised, quasi-randomised (where allocation is not strictly random), cross-over and cluster-randomised trials evaluating any type of conservative, physical or surgical intervention against placebo, usual care or no intervention for the management of FI and constipation in people with central neurological disease or injury.

Data collection and analysis: At least two review authors independently assessed the risk of bias in eligible trials using Cochrane's 'Risk of bias' tool and independently extracted data from the included trials using a range of prespecified outcome measures. We produced summary of findings tables for our main outcome measures and assessed the certainty of the evidence using GRADE.

Main results: We included 25 studies with 1598 participants. The studies were generally at high risk of bias due to lack of blinding of participants and personnel to the intervention. Half of the included studies were also at high risk of bias in terms of selective reporting. Outcomes were often reported heterogeneously across studies, making it difficult to pool data. We did not find enough evidence to be able to analyse the effects of interventions on individual central neurological diseases. Additionally, very few studies reported on the primary outcomes of self-reported improvement in FI or constipation, or Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score. Conservative interventions compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo Thirteen studies assessed this comparison. The interventions included assessment-based nursing, holistic nursing, probiotics, psyllium, faecal microbiota transplantation, and a stepwise protocol of increasingly invasive evacuation methods. Conservative interventions may result in a large improvement in faecal incontinence (standardised mean difference (SMD) -1.85, 95% confidence interval (CI) -3.47 to -0.23; 3 studies; n = 410; low-certainty evidence). We interpreted SMD ≥ 0.80 as a large effect. It was not possible to pool all data from studies that assessed improvement in constipation, but the evidence suggested that conservative interventions may improve constipation symptoms (data not pooled; 8 studies; n = 612; low-certainty evidence). Conservative interventions may lead to a reduction in mean time taken on bowel care (data not pooled; 5 studies; n = 526; low-certainty evidence). The evidence is uncertain about the effects of conservative interventions on condition-specific quality of life and adverse events. Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score was not reported. Physical therapy compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo Twelve studies assessed this comparison. The interventions included massage therapy, standing, osteopathic manipulative treatment, electrical stimulation, transanal irrigation, and conventional physical therapy with visceral mobilisation. Physical therapies may make little to no difference to self-reported faecal continence assessed using the St Mark's Faecal Incontinence Score, where the minimally important difference is five, or the Cleveland Constipation Score (MD -2.60, 95% CI -4.91 to -0.29; 3 studies; n = 155; low-certainty evidence). Physical therapies may result in a moderate improvement in constipation symptoms (SMD -0.62, 95% CI -1.10 to -0.14; 9 studies; n = 431; low-certainty evidence). We interpreted SMD ≥ 0.5 as a moderate effect. However, physical therapies may make little to no difference in Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score as the minimally important difference for this tool is 3 (MD -1.94, 95% CI -3.36 to -0.51; 7 studies; n = 358; low-certainty evidence). We are very uncertain about the effects of physical therapies on the time spent on bowel care, condition-specific quality of life and adverse effects (all very low-certainty evidence). Surgical interventions compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo No studies were found for surgical interventions that met the inclusion criteria for this review.

Authors' conclusions: There remains little research on this common and, for patients, very significant issue of bowel management. The available evidence is almost uniformly of low methodological quality. The clinical significance of some of the research findings presented here is difficult to interpret, not least because each intervention has only been addressed in individual trials, against control rather than compared against each other, and the interventions are very different from each other. Understanding whether there is a clinically-meaningful difference from the results of available trials is largely hampered by the lack of uniform outcome measures. This is due to an absence of core outcome sets, and development of these needs to be a research priority to allow studies to be compared directly. Some studies used validated constipation, incontinence or condition-specific measures; however, others used unvalidated analogue scales to report effectiveness. Some studies did not use any patient-reported outcomes and focused on physiological outcome measures, which is of relatively limited significance in terms of clinical implementation. There was evidence in favour of some conservative interventions, but these findings need to be confirmed by larger, well-designed controlled trials, which should include evaluation of the acceptability of the intervention to patients and the effect on their quality of life.

中枢神经系统疾病成人粪便失禁和便秘的保守治疗、物理治疗和手术治疗。
背景:与普通人相比,中枢神经疾病或损伤患者发生大便失禁(FI)和便秘的风险要高得多。这两种症状之间往往存在微妙的界限,旨在改善其中一种症状的治疗方法有可能会诱发另一种症状。据观察,肠道问题是导致这些人焦虑不安的原因,并可能降低他们的生活质量。目前的肠道管理主要是经验性的,研究基础有限。本综述适用于任何直接和长期影响中枢神经系统(创伤后、退行性、缺血性或肿瘤性)的疾病患者,如多发性硬化症、脊髓损伤、脑血管疾病、帕金森病和阿尔茨海默病。本研究是对 2001 年首次发表、随后于 2003 年、2006 年和 2014 年更新的 Cochrane 综述的更新:目的:评估保守、物理和手术干预对中枢神经系统神经性疾病或损伤患者FI和便秘的控制效果:我们检索了科克伦尿失禁专门登记册(检索日期为 2023 年 3 月 27 日),其中包括检索科克伦对照试验中央登记册 (CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、MEDLINE In-Process、MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print、ClinicalTrials.gov、WHO ICTRP 以及手工检索期刊和会议论文集;以及相关文章的所有参考文献列表:我们纳入了随机、准随机(分配并非严格随机)、交叉和分组随机试验,这些试验评估了任何类型的保守、物理或手术干预与安慰剂、常规护理或无干预对中枢神经疾病或损伤患者FI和便秘的治疗效果:至少有两名综述作者使用 Cochrane 的 "偏倚风险 "工具独立评估了符合条件的试验的偏倚风险,并使用一系列预先指定的结果指标独立提取了纳入试验的数据。我们为主要结果指标制作了研究结果摘要表,并使用 GRADE 评估了证据的确定性:我们纳入了 25 项研究,共有 1598 名参与者。由于缺乏对参与者和干预人员的盲法,这些研究普遍存在较高的偏倚风险。半数纳入的研究在选择性报告方面也存在高偏倚风险。不同研究的结果报告往往不尽相同,因此很难汇总数据。我们没有找到足够的证据来分析干预措施对个别中枢神经疾病的影响。此外,只有极少数研究报告了自我报告的FI或便秘改善情况或神经源性肠道功能障碍评分等主要结果。保守干预与常规护理、无积极治疗或安慰剂的比较 有 13 项研究对这一比较进行了评估。干预措施包括以评估为基础的护理、整体护理、益生菌、银翘片、粪便微生物群移植以及逐步增加侵入性排便方法的方案。保守性干预可显著改善粪便失禁(标准化平均差异(SMD)-1.85,95% 置信区间(CI)-3.47 至 -0.23;3 项研究;n = 410;低确定性证据)。我们将 SMD ≥ 0.80 视为大效应。我们无法汇总所有评估便秘改善情况的研究数据,但有证据表明,保守干预可改善便秘症状(未汇总数据;8 项研究;n = 612;低确定性证据)。保守干预可减少肠道护理的平均时间(数据未汇总;5 项研究;n = 526;低确定性证据)。关于保守干预对特定病症的生活质量和不良事件的影响,证据尚不确定。未报告神经源性肠功能障碍评分。物理疗法与常规护理、无积极治疗或安慰剂的比较 12 项研究对这一比较进行了评估。干预措施包括按摩疗法、站立疗法、整骨疗法、电刺激、经肛门冲洗以及带有内脏移动功能的传统物理疗法。物理疗法对使用圣马克大便失禁评分(最小重要差异为5)或克利夫兰便秘评分(MD -2.60,95% CI -4.91至-0.29;3项研究;n = 155;低确定性证据)评估的自我报告大便失禁情况可能几乎没有影响。物理疗法可适度改善便秘症状(SMD -0.62,95% CI -1.10 to -0.14;9 项研究;n = 431;低确定性证据)。我们将SMD≥0.5解释为中度效果。 然而,物理疗法对神经源性肠功能障碍评分的影响可能微乎其微,因为该工具的最小重要差异为 3(MD -1.94, 95% CI -3.36 to -0.51;7 项研究;n = 358;低确定性证据)。关于物理疗法对肠道护理时间、特定病情生活质量和不良反应的影响,我们还很不确定(所有证据的确定性都很低)。手术干预与常规护理、无积极治疗或安慰剂的比较 没有发现符合本综述纳入标准的手术干预研究:对于这一常见的、对患者来说非常重要的肠道管理问题,研究仍然很少。现有证据的方法学质量几乎都很低。这里介绍的一些研究结果的临床意义很难解释,这主要是因为每种干预措施都只在个别试验中进行过研究,而且是与对照组进行比较,而不是相互比较,而且干预措施之间差别很大。从现有的试验结果中了解是否存在有临床意义的差异,在很大程度上受到缺乏统一的结果衡量标准的影响。这是由于缺乏核心结果集,因此需要将开发这些结果集作为研究重点,以便对研究结果进行直接比较。一些研究使用了经过验证的便秘、失禁或特定病症测量方法;但其他研究则使用未经验证的模拟量表来报告疗效。有些研究没有使用任何患者报告的结果,而是侧重于生理结果测量,这对临床实施的意义相对有限。有证据表明一些保守干预措施是有效的,但这些结果还需要更大规模、设计良好的对照试验来证实,其中应包括评估患者对干预措施的接受程度以及对其生活质量的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.60
自引率
2.40%
发文量
173
审稿时长
1-2 weeks
期刊介绍: The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) stands as the premier database for systematic reviews in healthcare. It comprises Cochrane Reviews, along with protocols for these reviews, editorials, and supplements. Owned and operated by Cochrane, a worldwide independent network of healthcare stakeholders, the CDSR (ISSN 1469-493X) encompasses a broad spectrum of health-related topics, including health services.
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