Prevalence, impact and specialised treatment of urinary incontinence in women with chronic lung disease

2019 
Abstract Objectives To determine in women with clinically stable chronic lung disease (CLD) and healthy women; (1) prevalence of urinary incontinence; (2) risk factors for urinary incontinence; (3) effects of a standard course of specialised physiotherapy treatment (PT) in women with CLD. Design Prospective prevalence study; PT study in CLD subgroup. Setting Tertiary metropolitan public hospital. Participants Women with cystic fibrosis (CF, n  = 38), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD, n  = 27) and 69 healthy women without CLD. PT study — 10 women with CLD. Interventions Five continence PT sessions over 3 months. Main outcome measures Prevalence and impact of incontinence (questionnaire), number of leakage episodes (7-day accident diary), pelvic floor muscle function (ultrasound imaging) and quality of life (King’s Health Questionnaire). Results The majority of women in all three groups reported episodes of incontinence (CF 71%; COPD 70%; healthy women 55%). Compared to age-matched healthy controls, women with CF reported more episodes of incontinence ( P  = 0.006) and more commonly reported stress incontinence ( P  = 0.001). A logistic regression model revealed that women with CLD were twice as likely to develop incontinence than healthy women ( P  = 0.05). Women with COPD reported significantly more ‘bother’ with incontinence than age-matched women with incontinence. There was a significant reduction in incontinence episodes following treatment, which was maintained after three months. Conclusions The presence of CLD is an independent predictor of incontinence in women. In older women this is associated with more distress than in age-matched peers without CLD. Larger treatment studies are indicated for women with CLD and incontinence.
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