Pelvic floor muscle training with feedback or biofeedback for urinary incontinence in women.

IF 8.8 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Ana Carolina Nl Fernandes, Cristine H Jorge, Mark Weatherall, Isadora V Ribeiro, Sheila A Wallace, E Jean C Hay-Smith
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This review is an update of a Cochrane review last published in 2011.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>The primary objective was to assess the effects of PFMT with feedback or biofeedback, or both, for UI in women. We considered the following research questions. Are there differences in the effects of PFMT with feedback, biofeedback, or both versus PFMT without these adjuncts in the management of stress, urgency or mixed UI in women? Are there differences in the effects of feedback versus biofeedback as adjuncts to PFMT for women with UI? Are there differences in the effects of different types of biofeedback?</p><p><strong>Search methods: </strong>We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register (searched 27 September 2023), which includes searches of CENTRAL, MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP as well as handsearching of journals and conference proceedings, and the reference lists of relevant articles.</p><p><strong>Selection criteria: </strong>We included only randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster-RCTs and quasi-RCTs in women with UI. We excluded studies that recruited women with neurological conditions, who were pregnant or less than six months postpartum. 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Secondary outcomes were leakage episodes in 24 hours (mean difference (MD)), leakage severity (MD), subjective cure or improvement (odds ratio (OR)), satisfaction (OR), and adverse events (descriptive summary).</p><p><strong>Main results: </strong>We included 41 completed studies with 3483 women. Most (33 studies, 3031 women) investigated the effect of PFMT with biofeedback versus PFMT alone. Eleven studies were at low risk of bias overall, 27 at unclear risk of bias, and three at high risk. Only one study reported leakage severity, with no usable data. Comparison 1. PFMT with feedback versus PFMT alone: one eligible study reported no outcome of interest. Comparison 2. PFMT with biofeedback versus PFMT alone: there was little or no difference in incontinence quality of life (SMD 0.07 lower, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.18 lower to 0.05 higher; 11 studies, 1169 women; high-certainty evidence). Women randomised to biofeedback had 0.29 fewer leakage episodes in 24 hours versus PFMT alone (MD 0.29 lower, 95% CI 0.42 lower to 0.16 lower; 12 studies, 932 women; moderate-certainty evidence), but this slight reduction in leakage episodes may not be clinically important. Women in biofeedback arms report that there is probably little to no difference in cure or improvement (OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.58; 14 studies, 1383 women; moderate-certainty evidence) but may report greater satisfaction with treatment outcomes (OR 2.41, 95% CI 1.56 to 3.7; 6 studies, 390 women; low-certainty evidence). None of these outcomes were blinded. Eight studies (711 women) assessed severe adverse events but reported that there were no events. Comparison 3. PFMT with feedback or biofeedback versus PFMT alone: a single study contributed very-low certainty evidence regarding leakage episodes in 24 hours, subjective cure or improvement, and satisfaction. Comparison 4. PFMT with feedback versus PFMT with biofeedback: the evidence is very uncertain about any difference in effect between biofeedback versus feedback for incontinence-related quality of life. Not only is the evidence certainty very low, the confidence interval is very wide and there could be a more than small effect in favour of biofeedack or feedback (SMD 0.14 lower, 95% CI 0.56 lower to 0.28 higher; 2 studies, 91 women; very-low certainty evidence). There may be fewer leakage episodes in 24 hours for women receiving biofeedback verus feedback but the difference may not be clinically important and the evidence certainty is low (MD 0.28 lower, 95% CI 0.62 lower to 0.07 higher; 2 studies, 120 women; low-certainty evidence). There were no data for subjective cure, improvement or satisfaction. One study measured adverse events and none were reported. Comparison 5. PFMT with biofeedback versus PFMT with another type of biofeedback: five studies assessed this comparison, with individual studies contributing data for separate outcomes. There was low- or very-low certainty evidence about the benefits of one type of biofeedback versus another for leakage episodes in 24 hours or subjective cure or improvement, respectively. One study reported adverse events from two of nine women receiving electromyography biofeedback versus six of 10 receiving pressure biofeedback.</p><p><strong>Authors' conclusions: </strong>PFMT with biofeedback results in little to no difference in incontinence quality of life. The addition of biofeedback to PFMT likely results in a small unimportant difference in leakage episodes in 24 hours, and likely little to no difference in patient-reported cure or improvement. Satisfaction may increase slightly for PFMT with biofeedback, based on low-certainty evidence. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT), compared to no treatment, is effective for treating urinary incontinence (UI) in women. Feedback and biofeedback are additional resources that give women more information about their pelvic floor muscle contraction. The extra information could improve training performance by increasing capability or motivation for PFMT. The Committee on Conservative Management from the 7th International Consultation on Incontinence states that the benefit of adding biofeedback to PFMT is unclear. This review is an update of a Cochrane review last published in 2011.

Objectives: The primary objective was to assess the effects of PFMT with feedback or biofeedback, or both, for UI in women. We considered the following research questions. Are there differences in the effects of PFMT with feedback, biofeedback, or both versus PFMT without these adjuncts in the management of stress, urgency or mixed UI in women? Are there differences in the effects of feedback versus biofeedback as adjuncts to PFMT for women with UI? Are there differences in the effects of different types of biofeedback?

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

Selection criteria: We included only randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster-RCTs and quasi-RCTs in women with UI. We excluded studies that recruited women with neurological conditions, who were pregnant or less than six months postpartum. Eligible studies made one of the following comparisons: PFMT plus feedback versus PFMT alone, PFMT plus biofeedback versus PFMT alone, PFMT plus feedback or biofeedback versus PFMT alone, PFMT plus feedback versus PFMT plus biofeedback, and one type of biofeedback versus another.

Data collection and analysis: Two review authors independently assessed studies for eligibility, extracted data onto a prepiloted form, and assessed risk of bias using RoB 1. We used the GRADE approach to assess the certainty of evidence in each comparison by outcome. Our primary outcome was lower urinary tract symptom-specific quality of life. We pooled data using a standardised mean difference (SMD). Secondary outcomes were leakage episodes in 24 hours (mean difference (MD)), leakage severity (MD), subjective cure or improvement (odds ratio (OR)), satisfaction (OR), and adverse events (descriptive summary).

Main results: We included 41 completed studies with 3483 women. Most (33 studies, 3031 women) investigated the effect of PFMT with biofeedback versus PFMT alone. Eleven studies were at low risk of bias overall, 27 at unclear risk of bias, and three at high risk. Only one study reported leakage severity, with no usable data. Comparison 1. PFMT with feedback versus PFMT alone: one eligible study reported no outcome of interest. Comparison 2. PFMT with biofeedback versus PFMT alone: there was little or no difference in incontinence quality of life (SMD 0.07 lower, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.18 lower to 0.05 higher; 11 studies, 1169 women; high-certainty evidence). Women randomised to biofeedback had 0.29 fewer leakage episodes in 24 hours versus PFMT alone (MD 0.29 lower, 95% CI 0.42 lower to 0.16 lower; 12 studies, 932 women; moderate-certainty evidence), but this slight reduction in leakage episodes may not be clinically important. Women in biofeedback arms report that there is probably little to no difference in cure or improvement (OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.58; 14 studies, 1383 women; moderate-certainty evidence) but may report greater satisfaction with treatment outcomes (OR 2.41, 95% CI 1.56 to 3.7; 6 studies, 390 women; low-certainty evidence). None of these outcomes were blinded. Eight studies (711 women) assessed severe adverse events but reported that there were no events. Comparison 3. PFMT with feedback or biofeedback versus PFMT alone: a single study contributed very-low certainty evidence regarding leakage episodes in 24 hours, subjective cure or improvement, and satisfaction. Comparison 4. PFMT with feedback versus PFMT with biofeedback: the evidence is very uncertain about any difference in effect between biofeedback versus feedback for incontinence-related quality of life. Not only is the evidence certainty very low, the confidence interval is very wide and there could be a more than small effect in favour of biofeedack or feedback (SMD 0.14 lower, 95% CI 0.56 lower to 0.28 higher; 2 studies, 91 women; very-low certainty evidence). There may be fewer leakage episodes in 24 hours for women receiving biofeedback verus feedback but the difference may not be clinically important and the evidence certainty is low (MD 0.28 lower, 95% CI 0.62 lower to 0.07 higher; 2 studies, 120 women; low-certainty evidence). There were no data for subjective cure, improvement or satisfaction. One study measured adverse events and none were reported. Comparison 5. PFMT with biofeedback versus PFMT with another type of biofeedback: five studies assessed this comparison, with individual studies contributing data for separate outcomes. There was low- or very-low certainty evidence about the benefits of one type of biofeedback versus another for leakage episodes in 24 hours or subjective cure or improvement, respectively. One study reported adverse events from two of nine women receiving electromyography biofeedback versus six of 10 receiving pressure biofeedback.

Authors' conclusions: PFMT with biofeedback results in little to no difference in incontinence quality of life. The addition of biofeedback to PFMT likely results in a small unimportant difference in leakage episodes in 24 hours, and likely little to no difference in patient-reported cure or improvement. Satisfaction may increase slightly for PFMT with biofeedback, based on low-certainty evidence. Five of the 33 studies in this comparison collected information about adverse events, and four reported none in either group. Adverse events reported by women using biofeedback seemed related to using a vaginal or rectal device (e.g. discomfort with device in place, vaginal discharge). The other comparisons had few, small studies, and low- to very low-certainty evidence for all outcomes. None of the studies reported any severe adverse events.

骨盆底肌肉训练与反馈或生物反馈治疗女性尿失禁。
背景:盆底肌肉训练(PFMT),与不治疗相比,是有效的治疗女性尿失禁(UI)。反馈和生物反馈是额外的资源,可以给女性提供更多关于骨盆底肌肉收缩的信息。额外的信息可以通过增加PFMT的能力或动机来改善训练效果。来自第七届国际失禁咨询会议的保守管理委员会指出,在PFMT中加入生物反馈的益处尚不清楚。这篇综述是2011年发表的Cochrane综述的更新。目的:主要目的是评估PFMT与反馈或生物反馈,或两者兼而有之,对女性尿失禁的影响。我们考虑了以下研究问题。有反馈、生物反馈或两者的PFMT与没有这些辅助的PFMT在管理女性压力、急迫性或混合性尿失禁方面的效果有差异吗?反馈与生物反馈作为PFMT的辅助手段对UI女性患者的效果是否存在差异?不同类型的生物反馈的效果有不同吗?检索方法:检索Cochrane失禁专刊(检索日期为2023年9月27日),检索内容包括CENTRAL、MEDLINE、MEDLINE In-Process、MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print、ClinicalTrials.gov、WHO ICTRP以及手工检索的期刊和会议论文集以及相关文章的参考文献列表。选择标准:我们只纳入了女性UI患者的随机对照试验(rct)、集群rct和准rct。我们排除了那些有神经系统疾病、怀孕或产后不到6个月的女性。符合条件的研究进行了以下比较之一:PFMT加反馈与单独PFMT, PFMT加生物反馈与单独PFMT, PFMT加反馈或生物反馈与单独PFMT, PFMT加反馈与PFMT加生物反馈,一种生物反馈与另一种生物反馈。数据收集和分析:两位综述作者独立评估了研究的合格性,将数据提取到预试验表格中,并使用RoB 1评估偏倚风险。我们使用GRADE方法根据结果评估每个比较证据的确定性。我们的主要结局是下尿路症状特异性生活质量。我们使用标准化平均差(SMD)汇总数据。次要结局是24小时内渗漏事件(平均差值(MD))、渗漏严重程度(MD)、主观治愈或改善(优势比(or))、满意度(or)和不良事件(描述性总结)。主要结果:我们纳入41项已完成的研究,涉及3483名女性。大多数(33项研究,3031名女性)调查了PFMT联合生物反馈与PFMT单独的效果。11项研究总体偏倚风险低,27项偏倚风险不明确,3项偏倚风险高。只有一项研究报告了泄漏的严重程度,没有可用的数据。比较1。有反馈的PFMT与单独的PFMT:一项符合条件的研究没有报告感兴趣的结果。比较2。PFMT联合生物反馈与单独PFMT:在失禁生活质量方面几乎或没有差异(SMD低0.07,95%可信区间(CI)低0.18至高0.05;11项研究,1169名女性;高确定性的证据)。随机分配到生物反馈组的女性与单独使用PFMT组相比,24小时内渗漏事件减少0.29次(MD降低0.29,95% CI 0.42 - 0.16;12项研究,932名女性;中度确定性证据),但这种渗漏事件的轻微减少可能在临床上并不重要。生物反馈组的妇女报告说,在治愈或改善方面可能几乎没有差异(or 1.26, 95% CI 1.00至1.58;14项研究,1383名女性;中等确定性证据),但可能报告对治疗结果更满意(OR 2.41, 95% CI 1.56至3.7;6项研究,390名女性;确定性的证据)。这些结果都不是盲法的。8项研究(711名妇女)评估了严重的不良事件,但报告没有发生不良事件。比较3。PFMT与反馈或生物反馈相比,单独PFMT:一项研究提供了关于24小时内渗漏事件,主观治愈或改善以及满意度的非常低的确定性证据。比较4。带反馈的PFMT与带生物反馈的PFMT:生物反馈与反馈对失禁相关生活质量的影响差异的证据非常不确定。不仅证据确定性很低,置信区间也很宽,支持生物反馈或反馈的影响可能非常小(SMD 0.14低,95% CI 0.56低至0.28高;2项研究,91名女性;极低确定性证据)。在24小时内,接受生物反馈的女性与接受生物反馈的女性相比,渗漏事件可能较少,但差异可能在临床上并不重要,证据确定性较低(MD低0.28,95% CI低0.62至高0.07;2项研究,120名女性;确定性的证据)。 没有主观治愈、改善或满意度的数据。一项研究测量了不良事件,但没有报道。比较5。生物反馈的PFMT与另一种生物反馈的PFMT:五项研究评估了这种比较,个别研究提供了不同结果的数据。对于24小时内渗漏事件或主观治愈或改善,一种类型的生物反馈与另一种类型的生物反馈的益处分别存在低或极低的确定性证据。一项研究报告了9名接受肌电生物反馈的女性中有2名发生不良事件,而10名接受压力生物反馈的女性中有6名发生不良事件。作者的结论是:生物反馈的PFMT对尿失禁的生活质量几乎没有影响。在PFMT中加入生物反馈可能会导致24小时内渗漏事件的小而不重要的差异,并且在患者报告的治愈或改善方面可能几乎没有差异。基于低确定性证据,生物反馈的PFMT满意度可能略有增加。33项研究中有5项收集了有关不良事件的信息,4项报告两组均无不良事件。使用生物反馈的妇女报告的不良事件似乎与使用阴道或直肠装置有关(例如,装置就位后不适,阴道分泌物)。其他的比较研究很少,研究规模小,所有结果的证据都是低到非常低的。没有研究报告任何严重的不良事件。
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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