Day-to-day variations and effects of urinary and fecal incontinence among adults with spina bifida: An ecological momentary assessment diary pilot study.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Journal of Pediatric Urology Pub Date : 2024-11-07 DOI:10.1016/j.jpurol.2024.11.001
Konrad M Szymanski, Rosalia Misseri, Devon J Hensel
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Abstract

Background: No studies have evaluated the day-to-day variations in urinary incontinence (UI) and fecal incontinence (FI) among adults with spina bifida (SB). We aimed to 1) describe variations in UI/FI over 30 days, 2) assess factors associated with anxiety about incontinence, and 3) correlate anxiety about incontinence and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) among adults with SB (exploratory).

Methods: Adults with SB participated in a larger 30-day smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) study of well-being and incontinence. We analyzed baseline demographics, temporal variables (baseline UI/FI, incontinence, and anxiety on days prior), and incontinence episode-specific variables (number of daily episodes, incontinence interval, quantity). Urinary and fecal incontinence-related anxiety (UIA/FIA) was measured on a 5-point Likert scale ("How anxious were you because of urine/stool leaks today?"), HRQOL with QUALAS-A (scores range 0-100, 0 = lowest HRQOL). Mixed-effects, random intercept ordinal and linear regression was used.

Results: Eighty-nine adults participated at a median age of 33 years old (71 % female, 53 % shunted, 49 % community ambulators). Participants contributed 2578 total diary days: 61 % were associated with any incontinence (41 % UI only, 6 % FI only, 13 % both). Eighty-two (92 %) adults reported UI on a median of 16 days, but experiences varied: 6 % had a single episode, while 33 % had UI on 28-30 days (Summary Figure). Seventy adults (79 %) reported FI on a median of 5 days, less frequently than UI (p < 0.001), but experiences varied: 11 % had a single FI episode, while 31 % had FI on 10 or more days. Fewer participants reported any UIA than FIA (50 % vs. 72 %, respectively, p < 0.001). On multivariate regression, (1) higher UIA was reported by individuals with higher baseline UIA, higher UIA on days prior, multiple daily episodes and higher UI quantity (p ≤ 0.02), while (2) higher FIA was reported by those with lower baseline HRQOL, fewer FI episodes on days prior, higher FIA on days prior, and higher UI quantity (p ≤ 0.02). FIA was correlated with lower end-of-study HRQOL (p = 0.03).

Discussion: Instances of incontinence are not uniform experiences. Their effects vary with factors beyond the actual episode. This suggests novel potential points of intervention to improving long-term HRQOL among people with incontinence.

Conclusion: Day-to-day experiences of UI and FI vary among adults with SB across multiple dimensions. Anxiety about incontinence when it occurs varies not only based on individual- and episode-specific characteristics, but also on incontinence in the preceding days. Operationalizing these insights into potential clinical interventions warrants further investigation.

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脊柱裂成人大小便失禁的日常变化及其影响:生态学瞬间评估日记试点研究。
背景:目前还没有研究对脊柱裂(SB)成人尿失禁(UI)和大便失禁(FI)的日常变化进行评估。我们的目的是:1)描述 30 天内 UI/FI 的变化;2)评估与尿失禁焦虑相关的因素;3)将脊柱裂成人尿失禁焦虑与健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)联系起来(探索性):方法:患有 SB 的成年人参加了一项为期 30 天的大型智能手机生态瞬间评估(EMA)研究,该研究针对幸福感和尿失禁问题。我们分析了基线人口统计学、时间变量(前几天的基线尿失禁/FI、失禁和焦虑)以及失禁发作特定变量(每日发作次数、失禁间隔时间和数量)。尿失禁和大便失禁相关焦虑(UIA/FIA)采用 5 点李克特量表进行测量("您今天因为尿/凳子漏尿有多焦虑?"),HRQOL 采用 QUALAS-A(评分范围 0-100,0 = HRQOL 最低)。研究采用了混合效应、随机截距序数和线性回归方法:89 名成人参与了此次研究,中位年龄为 33 岁(71% 为女性,53% 为分流患者,49% 为社区行动者)。参与者共撰写了 2578 天的日记:61%的人有尿失禁症状(41%仅有尿失禁,6%仅有排尿困难,13%同时有尿失禁和排尿困难)。82名成人(92%)报告尿失禁的中位数为16天,但经历各不相同:6%的人只出现过一次,33%的人则在 28-30 天内出现过尿频(摘要图)。有 70 名成年人(79%)报告尿失禁的中位数为 5 天,少于尿失禁的频率(P 讨论):大小便失禁并不是千篇一律的经历。其影响因实际情况之外的因素而异。这为改善尿失禁患者的长期 HRQOL 提出了新的潜在干预点:结论:成人尿失禁患者的日常尿失禁和排尿困难经历在多个方面存在差异。对尿失禁发生时的焦虑不仅因个体和发作的特定特征而异,而且还与前几天的尿失禁情况有关。将这些见解转化为潜在的临床干预措施值得进一步研究。
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
Journal of Pediatric Urology
Journal of Pediatric Urology PEDIATRICS-UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.00%
发文量
330
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pediatric Urology publishes submitted research and clinical articles relating to Pediatric Urology which have been accepted after adequate peer review. It publishes regular articles that have been submitted after invitation, that cover the curriculum of Pediatric Urology, and enable trainee surgeons to attain theoretical competence of the sub-specialty. It publishes regular reviews of pediatric urological articles appearing in other journals. It publishes invited review articles by recognised experts on modern or controversial aspects of the sub-specialty. It enables any affiliated society to advertise society events or information in the journal without charge and will publish abstracts of papers to be read at society meetings.
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