Urinary Incontinence Clinical Trial
Official title:
PERL 4: Promoting Effective Recovery From Labor
The primary goal of this project is to determine the efficacy of an antenatal Bladder Health class to prevent UI in a diverse sample of African American, Caucasian, and Hispanic childbearing women. The determination of efficacy will be made at 12-months post index birth, a time point that is a traditional benchmark of recovery from childbirth, using UI incidence/severity as the primary outcome.
This study is significant because UI prevalence is 34% overall among US women, nearly half
of whom consider their incontinence to be moderately to extremely bothersome. UI is 2.0 to
2.6 fold greater in women after pregnancy and childbirth as compared to their never pregnant
counterparts, with the incidence increasing after each child. UI impact increases as women
age extending into middle and later life. The financial cost of UI in the United States
exceeds $19 billion per year . Other costs are identified in the Healthy People 2010 report
22 and include: 1) decreased activity/ fitness, which can be seriously affected because
women who are concerned about accidental leakage markedly curtail physical activity and 2)
increased depression, which has been linked to UI in women. Women are at least twice as
likely as men to have UI; pregnancy and childbirth are major explanatory factors. In
perimenopausal women, prevalence of any UI was 57% and of moderate to severe UI was 25%;
after controlling for age, race/ethnicity, menopausal status and body mass index, parity
persisted as a significant predictor of UI with an OR of 1.62 (CI 1.31, 2.01).
Noninvasive interventions during the period of childbearing are of particular interest for
UI prevention in women. Two self-management practices recommended for the initial treatment
of UI are: Pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT), defined by the International Continence
Society as repetitive selective voluntary contraction and relaxation of specific pelvic
floor muscles, and bladder training (BT), defined as a program of scheduled voiding with
gradually progressive voiding intervals. The Knack Maneuver (a preemptive pelvic floor
muscle contraction to decrease stress UI and/or suppress urge UI) has demonstrated efficacy
in older women diagnosed with UI. In childbearing women, only PFMT has been tested with a
rigorous RCT design. We taught PFMT, the Knack, and BT as a combined strategy to older women
and found a two-fold prevention effect. The proposed project is innovative because it will
be the first to our knowledge to test the preventive capacity of an intervention in
childbearing women that combines PFMT, the Knack, and BT. This project is also innovative
because it will be conducted with a diverse sample of primiparous/multiparous women, using a
3-year follow-up period. Because PFMT is the only self-management strategy that is currently
recommended practice for maternity patients, we will use PFMT adherence in comparisons
between the treatment and control conditions
Recruitment and Informed Consent:
Fliers specifying eligibility criteria and benefits of research participation will be
prominently displayed in the waiting areas and in the women's bathrooms of the respective
clinical sites. Potential participants will be invited to speak with a designated site-based
contact re: what participation in the study would entail. This individual will answer
initial questions, review written material that describes study participation, conduct
verbal screening, and obtain informed consent from eligible individuals. Eligible
participants will be scheduled for a clinic visit at the respective site for a clinic visit
to obtain clinical verification of no objective incontinence (negative standing stress test)
and evidence of ability to contract the pelvic floor correctly (digital measure). Following
determination of eligibility, participants will be randomized into control (routine care) or
treatment (scheduled for Bladder Health class) condition.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Caregiver), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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