- Title
- Effectiveness of standard urotherapy (basic bladder advice) and combination therapies in managing bladder dysfunction in children with treated behavioral disorders: Results of a prospective cohort (DABBED) study
- Creator
- Eliezer, Dilharan D.; Samnakay, Naeem; Starkey, Malcolm R.; Deshpande, Aniruddh V.
- Relation
- Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Vol. 13, Issue 4, p. 490-497
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/luts.12400
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2021
- Description
- Aims: We evaluated the efficacy of standard urotherapy and combination therapies in treatment of bladder dysfunction in children with treated behavioral disorders. Methods: Prospective study of children (6-16 years) with bladder dysfunction and behavioral disorders was conducted between March 2018-2020. Eligible children were initially offered standard urotherapy and those with no response at 3 months were offered combination therapies. Symptomatic response, changes in Akbal score and PinQ score were reported at 6 months and outcomes were correlated to behavioral diagnoses and medications. Results: Thirty-nine consecutive children (male = 27, mean age [SD] 10.3 [±2.0] years) were recruited, of whom 29 completed the study (five lost to follow-up, three non-compliant to treatment, two excluded). Thirty-four (87%) children had attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis (n = 11) and non-monosymptomatic enuresis (n = 17) were the commonest diagnoses. Following 3-month review, 14 (38%) children continued to receive standard urotherapy, while 15 (41%) children were transitioned to combination therapy. At 6-month review, complete/partial response was seen in 62% (23/37) and no response in 16% (6/37); with 32% (12/37) responding to standard urotherapy alone. Akbal symptom scores (15.9-11.5; P < 0.01) and PinQ scores (26.0-19.5; P = 0.008) improved significantly at 6-month follow-up. Type of underlying behavioral disorder(s) or medications for behavioral disorder did not influence the outcomes. Conclusion: This study confirms that children with underlying behavioral disorders are able to have a good response to the appropriate therapy for their bladder dysfunction with a third of children responding to standard urotherapy alone.
- Subject
- ADHD; autism; behavioral disorder; child; urinary incontinence
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1471455
- Identifier
- uon:48685
- Identifier
- ISSN:1757-5664
- Language
- eng
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