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Anatomical location and number of injection sites of intravesical OnabotulinumtoxinA for females with refractory idiopathic overactive bladder: A scoping review

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posted on 2024-07-25, 04:16 authored by Ellen Kelsey, Jessica Wynn, Angela Holmes, Kathryn McLeodKathryn McLeod
AbstractAimsThe negative impact on quality of life and the economic‐related burden to the patient and the health care system associated with idiopathic overactive bladder (iOAB) is well‐documented. Intradetrusor OnabotulinumtoxinA (BTN/A) injections are a well‐used treatment modality for the management of overactive detrusor refractory to medical management, with well‐documented efficacy and safety profiles. There is currently no best practice guideline for the administration of BTN/A for this procedure and historically the trigone of the bladder has been excluded from the injection paradigm given the risk of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR).MethodsA scoping review methodology was employed to assess available literature to evaluate current techniques used. There is emerging literature that the inclusion of the trigone may increase the efficacy of the procedure, while maintaining a similar adverse effect profile. Similar results could also be obtained by decreasing the number of injection sites. A scoping review was completed with systematic methodology using the Preferred Systematic Reviews and Meta Analyses extension for Scoping Review checklist. The search strategy looked to evaluate BTN/A and number of injection sites and the inclusion of the trigone in female patients with iOAB. Studies with male or neurogenic bladder only were excluded. Mixed studies were included. A specialist research librarian was engaged, with supervision from a functional urologist using a combination of MeSH and natural language terms. Two investigators independently reviewed the titles and abstracts.ResultsTwelve articles were included and were published between 2005 and 2021. There was no evidence of VUR in any of the results. All but one study reported similar if not improved efficacy of trigone‐inclusion. Lower number of injection sites had similar efficacy profiles to higher numbers of intradetrusor injections.ConclusionsFurther high‐quality randomized control trials of trigone inclusion and reduction of injection sites are required. It is hoped that with further exploration of intraoperative methods for BTN/A injections, the development of universally accepted guidelines may optimize management and experiences for patients with iOAB.

History

Journal

Neurourology and Urodynamics

Volume

43

Pagination

545-791

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0733-2467

eISSN

1520-6777

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Wiley