Abstract

To determine the overall quality of life and patient satisfaction associated with different bladder management strategies in neuro-urological patients. The second objective was to identify other associated factors that may further influence the patient's quality of life. Systematic Review. Studies from Pubmed, Cochrane, and Google Scholar databases were extracted using terms relating to 'quality of life', 'satisfaction', in 'neurogenic bladder' combined with 'bladder management methods' that included 'continent and non-continent urine diversion', 'intermittent-catheterization', 'indwelling catheter' and 'condom-catheter'. Only studies with a minimal proportion of 80% of neurogenic bladder patients were included. Search was conducted, and article titles and abstracts were rated. 136 papers were screened and assessed for eligibility. 25 studies were included in the final analysis and consisted of ten retrospective, nine prospective, five cross-sectional and a single randomized controlled trial. In total, 3002 patients were included, with a majority of male (55%) and spinal cord injury (88%) patients. 167 patients had incontinent urinary diversions, 464 had continent urinary diversions (bladder augmentation with or without cutaneous catheterizable channel), 1698 used intermittent catheterization (self or by an attendant), 550 had an indwelling catheter (urethral or suprapubic), and 123 had condom catheters. Quality of life was assessed using a wide variety of validated and non-validated questionnaires. Overall, patients with continent and incontinent diversion tended to have better scores. Use of catheters tended to have more unsatisfactory scores, with indwelling and attendant-intermittent catheterization often scoring worse. On the other hand, patients using self-intermittent catheterization tended to fair well. Normal micturition followed by self-catheterization yielded an overall higher quality of life. Data were too divergent to rank the other bladder management methods. However, by improving continence, each method aims to enhance quality of life.

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