Abstract

Introduction: Evidence suggests urinary urgency is associated with cognitive impairment in a subtype of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients. This study investigates if cognitive impairment independently predicts the presence of urinary dysfunction.Methods: We report data of 189 idiopathic PD patients, excluding those with concomitant diseases or medication interacting with bladder function. A standardized questionnaire was used to define the presence of urinary urgency. All patients underwent a comprehensive motor, cognitive non-motor and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) assessment. Multivariable linear regression analysis was performed to identify independent variables characterizing urinary urgency in PD (PD-UU), which were assigned as discriminant features to estimate their individual contribution to the phenotype of the PD-UU group.Results: Of 189 PD patients, 115 (60.8%) reported PD-UU. The linear regression analysis showed that among cognitive domains, executive function (EF; p = 0.04) had a significant negative association with PD-UU. In a second model, scores of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) significantly differentiated between study groups (p = 0.007) and also non-motor symptom (NMS) burden (p < 0.001). The third model consisted of reports of HRQoL, of which stigma was the only subscale of the Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) differentiating between patients with and without PD-UU (p = 0.02). The linear discriminant analysis provided evidence that the combination of EF, NMS burden, nocturia, and stigma discriminated between groups with 72.4% accuracy.Conclusion: In our large, non-demented PD cohort, urinary urgency was associated with executive dysfunction (EF), supporting a possible causative link between both symptoms. A combination of neuropsychological and non-motor aspects identified patients with PD-UU with high discriminative accuracy.

Highlights

  • Evidence suggests urinary urgency is associated with cognitive impairment in a subtype of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients

  • The impairment in executive function (EF) is a common feature in PD (Dirnberger and Jahanshahi, 2013), which raises the question if these specific functions associates with PD-UU in a subtype of PD patients, independent from the presence of dementia

  • No group effect was found according to the presence and severity of levodopa associated motor fluctuations (p = 0.86)

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence suggests urinary urgency is associated with cognitive impairment in a subtype of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients. This study investigates if cognitive impairment independently predicts the presence of urinary dysfunction. Urinary urgency is a common non-motor symptom (NMS) in Parkinson’s disease (PD; Campos-Sousa et al, 2003; Winge and Fowler, 2006; McDonald et al, 2017). A recent study found no association between PD-UU and cognitive impairment (Picillo et al, 2017) where the applied cognitive screening assessment did not provide insight into the domain-specific characterization of cognitive functions. The impairment in EF is a common feature in PD (Dirnberger and Jahanshahi, 2013), which raises the question if these specific functions associates with PD-UU in a subtype of PD patients, independent from the presence of dementia

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