04. Urinary Incontinence

Resident Editor: Scott R. Bauer, MD, ScM

Faculty Editor: Alison Huang, MD

BOTTOM LINE

✔ Screen all parous women, patients over 65, high-risk pts

✔ Rule out and treat reversible causes

✔ Start with lifestyle changes and behavioral treatment; refer if  red flags or conservative therapies not effective

Background

  • Urinary incontinence (UI) occurs in both men and women, risk increases with age, and it is very common among people living in nursing homes (~50-70%).
  • Incontinence is NOT a normal part of aging and can result in significant impairment in quality of life.
  • Incontinence is classified in 5 types, which are usually based on symptoms (stress and urge subtypes are the most common):
    1. Stress incontinence (SUI): involuntary leakage with maneuvers that increase intraabdominal pressure. Due to poorly functioning urethral closure, often related to vaginal childbirth, obesity, or chronically elevated intraabdominal pressure (constipation, heavy lifting, intense exercise). More common in women, rare in men without prior prostate surgery.
    2. Urge incontinence (UUI): involuntary leakage preceeded by a sudden compelling desire to urinate that is difficult to defer. Primarily idiopathic but can be due to neurologic conditions (Parkinson’s, MS, spinal cord injury).
    3. Mixed incontinence: mixture of both UUI and SUI.
    4. Overflow incontinence: Urine dribbling and/or continuous leakage from an overfilled bladder. Due to incomplete empyting of bladder. More common in men (due to BPH), rare in women (without organic or post-surgical urethral abnormality, neurologic disease)
    5. Functional incontinence: Impaired ability to use toilet. Usually caused by functional, cognitive, or mobility difficulties resulting in physical or environmental barriers. No dysfunction of bladder control.

Differential Diagnosis

 Transient causes of UI (“DIAPPERS”): consider if sudden onset and duration < 6 weeks

  • D - Delerium: cognitive dysfunction
  • I - Infection: irritation results in incontinence
  • A - Atrophic Vaginitis: postmenopausal status is associated with frequency, UUI
  • P - Pharmaceuticals: diuretics (increase urine output - consider timing); anticholinergics, narcotics, or calcium channel blockers (impair bladder contraction); sedatives (cause delirium); alpha agonists (increase urinary spincther tone  retention); alpha-antagonists (decrease spincther tone  SUI)
  • P - Psychological: anxiety and depression are associated with impaired voiding and increased bother from urinary symptoms
  • E - Excessive urine production: untreated diabetes, increased fluid intake (>2L/day or large episodic intakes), alcohol, caffeine, hypercalcemia, DI
  • R - Restricted mobility: patients cannot reach bathroom in time
  • S - Stool: constipation

• Other causes of UI

  • Neurologic disease: MS, stroke, Parkinson’s, lumbar disc disease
  • Post-surgical: nerve dysfunction after pelvic surgery, post prostatectomy
  • GU anatomic abnormalities: pelvic prolapse, urethral strictures, bladder diverticulum, BPH, overactive bladder
  • Multipartity with multiple vaginal deliveries, traumatic delivery

Evaluation

• History

  • Precipitating factors (physical activity, coughing, laughing) – Use 3IQ below
  • Severity (number of pads per day and amount of wetness)
  • Concominant symptoms (dysuria, hematuria, urgency, weak stream, neurologic symptoms)
  • Obstetrical history
  • Surgical history (particularly pelvic surgery)
  • Comorbidities (obesity, neurologic disease, diabetes, BPH)
  • Rule out reversible causes of UI (see “Differential Diagnosis” above)
  • If etiology not clear based on initial history, have patient complete a bladder diary for 3 days: record timing and volume of voids/incontinence, liquid intake, activities or situations that prompt UI.

The 3 Incontinence Questionnaire (3IQ)

1) During the past three months, have you leaked urine (even a small amount)?

Yes-> continue to #2

No-> questionnaire completed

2) During the past three months, did you leak urine:

A. When you were performing some physical activity, such as coughing, sneezing, lifting, or exercising?

B. When you had the urge or the feeling that you needed to empty your bladder, but you could not get to the toilet fast enough?

C. Without physical activity and without a sense of urgency?

3) During the past three months, did you leak urine most often:

A. When you were performing some physical activity, such as coughing, sneezing, lifting, or exercising?

B. When you had the urge or feeling that you needed to empty your bladder, but you could not get to the toilet fast enough?

C. Without physical activity and without a sense of urgency?

D. About equally as often with physical activity as with a sense of urgency?

Scoring based on response to question 3: A: SUI; B:UUI; C: other causes; D: Mixed

Note: mainly developed and validated in women

• Physical Exam: Keep focused

  • Neuro: Mental status, mobility
  • Men: prostate exam
  • Women
    • Consider pelvic exam if patient endorses symptoms of prolapse: look for vaginal atrophy, pelvic organ prolapse (high-risk for retention if beyond the hymen), pelvic masses. Can assess pelvic floor muscle integrity by asking patient to contract pelvic floor muscles during bimanual exam.
    • Urinary stress test (optional): while standing over chuck/pad or in pelvic exam position, the patient strains or coughs with a comfortably full bladder while the clinician directly observes the urethral meatus for urine leakage (PPV 80-97% for SUI).
    • If no symptoms of prolapse, reasonable to treat empirically without a pelvic exam.
  • Consider rectal exam if fecal symptoms (evaluate for masses, fecal impaction, rectal tone)

• Labs/tests

  • Urinalysis: evaluate for pyuria, hematuria, or glycosuria.
  • Consider urine culture if signs or symptoms of infection. Note: asymptomatic bacteriuria common in older women and is not necessarily a cause of incontinence.
  • Consider PSA in men (esp if severe or acute onset of symptoms, used as a marker of prostate size and to r/o prostate cancer, this is not prostate cancer screening since the patient is symptomatic).
  • Post-void Residual (PVR): recommended for patients who report incomplete voiding, woman with pelvic organ prolapse beyond the hymen, or men with severe voiding symptoms. PVR < 100mL or <1/3 of total voided volume is considered adequate emptying.
  • Routine urodynamic testing not recommended, but may be used by urologists for pre-surgical evaluation.

Treatment

  • For all types of UI: consider and treat transient or reversible causes (Ddx above), smoking cessation, reduce large volume fluid intake (goal 4-5oz/hr, <2L per day, avoid large episodic intakes), avoid diuretics (caffeine, alcohol, carbonated or diet beverages), treat cough and constipation, promote weight loss, timed voiding (patients deliberately empty their bladder starting every 1-2 hours, then gradually increase time between voids), pelvic floor muscle training.
  • Stress incontinence:
  • Pelvic Floor Muscle Training: First line treatment. Consists of Kegel exercises (3 sets of 10 slow contractions held for 10 seconds each, for least 4 months). Supervised training may improve adherence and can involve vaginal weighted cones, biofeedback, or other types of feedback to improve cure rates (~60%).
  • Pessaries: may be preferable for women with SUI during specific situations like exercise.
  • Medications: none FDA approved.
  • Surgical treatments: pelvic organ prolapse repair, bladder neck suspension, urethral sling, artificial urinary spinchter, urethral bulking injection.
  • Urge incontinence:
  • Bladder Training (1st line after treating reversible causes): Begins with scheduled voids and recording a bladder diary (urine volume measurements). If strong urge occurs, there are cognitive techniques for urgency suppression/distraction (patients should stand or sit still when an urge occurs, perform 3 quick pelvic muscle contractions, then walk to bathroom when urge passes).  Pelvic floor muscle training exercises are also helpful, but not as effective as for SUI.
  • Medications (2nd line):
    • Anitcholinergics (darifenacin, fesoterodine, oxybutynin, solifenacin, tolterodine, and trospium) are moderately effective at reducing urgency, frequency, and UI episodes, although there is a significant placebo effect. Contraindicated in untreated narrow-angle glaucoma, may exacerbate existing cardiac arrthymias. Common side effects include dry mouth, constipation, and dry eyes (50% self-discontinuation within 6 months). Extended release forms may reduce side effects. Start elderly patients on half of lowest dose, uptitrate slowly and monitor for subclinical urinary retention and other anticholinergic side effects. Note: Most anticholinergics appear to have similar efficacy, but oxybutynin has the highest rates of discontinuation due to side effects.
    • Beta-3 Agonist (e.g. mirabegron): useful for older adults who cannot or should not take anitcholinergics due to high risk of cognitive decline. Can also provide syngistic effects for patients not controlled with anticholinergic monotherapy. Side effects include elevated blood pressure.
    • Potential invasive treatments: OnabotulinumtoxinA bladder injection, sacral neuromodulation, percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation, and anatomic correction (augmentation cystoplasty).
  • Mixed incontinence: focus initially on treating the most dominant or bothersome UI subtype.
  • Overflow incontinence: focus on treating the underlying condition (i.e. meds/surgery for BPH, pessary/surgery for cystocele).

When to refer

  • For all UI patients: abdominal and/or pelvic pain, hematuria in absence of UTI, concern for neurological conditions, lifelong UI (since childhood), recurrent UTIs, long-term catheterization, difficulty passing a urethral catheter, persistent symptoms despite therapeutic intervention, diagnostic uncertainty or concern for anatomic abnormalities, normal pressure hydrocephalus triad (cognitive impairment, wide-based gait, and UI), persistently elevated PVR (>100mL in adults; >150mL in elderly), obstructive nephropathy, or if patient desiring surgical treatment.
  • Women: pelvic prolapse beyond the hymen.
  • Men: severe voiding symptoms, post-prostatectomy incontinence, abnormal prostate exam, elevated PSA, prostatitis with UI.
     

References

Lukacz ES, Santiago-Lastra Y, Albo ME, & Brubaker L. Urinary Incontinence in Women. JAMA. 2017, 318(16), 1592.

Khandewal C, Kistler C. Diagnosis of Urinary Incontinence. Am Fam Physician. 2013 Apr 15;

Brown, JS, Bradley, CS, Subak, LL, et al. The sensitivity and specificity of a simple test to distinguish between urge and stress urinary incontinence. Ann Intern Med 2006; 144:715.

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Effective Health Care Program. Non-surgical treatments for urinary incontinence in adult women: diagnosis and comparative effectiveness. Clinician research summary. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; April 2012.

Shamliyan TA, et al.  Benefits and Harms of Pharmacologic Treatment for Urinary Incontinence in Women: A Systematic Review. Ann Intern Med. 2012;156:861-874

Shah D, Badlani G. Treatment of Overactive Bladder and Incontinence in the Elderly. Rev Urol. 2002;4(suppl 4):S38–S43