Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to investigate improvement in voiding condition after the initial botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) injection into the urethral sphincter among patients with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) and voiding dysfunction. Moreover, subsequent surgical procedures and bladder management were evaluated. Materials and Methods: From 2011 to 2020, 118 patients with SCI and dysuria who wanted to void spontaneously received their first BoNT-A injection at a dose of 100 U into the urethral sphincter. Improvement in voiding and bladder conditions after BoNT-A treatment were assessed. Next, patients were encouraged to continually receive BoNT-A injections into the urethral sphincter, convert to other bladder managements, or undergo surgery. After undergoing bladder management and surgical procedures, the patients were requested to report improvement in voiding condition and overall satisfaction to bladder conditions. Then, data were compared. Results: In total, 94 male and 24 female participants were included in this analysis. Among them, 51 presented with cervical, 43 with thoracic, and 24 with lumbosacral SCI. After BoNT-A injections into the urethral sphincter, 71 (60.2%) patients, including 18 (15.3%) with excellent, and 53 (44.9%) with moderate improvement, had significant improvement in voiding condition. Patients with cervical SCI (66.6%), detrusor overactivity and detrusor sphincter dyssynergia (72.0%), partial hand function (80.0%), and incomplete SCI (68.4%) had a better improvement rate than the other subgroups. Only 42 (35.6%) patients continually received treatment with BoNT-A injections into the urethral sphincter. Meanwhile, more than 60% of patients who converted their treatment to augmentation enterocystoplasty (n = 5), bladder outlet surgery (n = 25), BoNT-A injections into the detrusor muscle (n = 20), and medical treatment (n = 55) had moderate and marked improvement in voiding dysfunction and overall satisfaction. Discussion: Although BoNT-A injections into the urethral sphincter could improve voiding condition, only patients with SCI who presented with voiding dysfunction were commonly satisfied. Those whose treatments were converted to other bladder managements, which can promote urinary continence, or to surgical procedures, which can facilitate spontaneous voiding, had favorable treatment outcomes.

Highlights

  • Voiding dysfunction and urinary incontinence are common neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunctions among patients with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI)

  • Patients with SCI caused by suprasacral lesions frequently present with neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO) and detrusor sphincter dyssynergia (DSD) [1] and those with SCI above the T6 level might have autonomic dysreflexia (AD)

  • In the management of voiding dysfunction among patients with SCI who presented with DSD and/or AD, clean intermittent catheterization (CIC) is the primary choice if medical treatment and bladder triggering are not effective in evacuating the bladder adequately [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Voiding dysfunction and urinary incontinence are common neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunctions among patients with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI). Half of patients with untreated DSD will develop deleterious urologic complications due to high intravesical pressures, resulting in urolithiasis, urinary tract infection (UTI), vesicoureteral reflux, hydronephrosis, obstructive uropathy, and renal failure. In the management of voiding dysfunction among patients with SCI who presented with DSD and/or AD, clean intermittent catheterization (CIC) is the primary choice if medical treatment and bladder triggering are not effective in evacuating the bladder adequately [3]. In patients who cannot receive such treatments, external sphincterotomy has been the conventional management [4]. This procedure is associated with significant risks, including hemorrhage, erectile dysfunction, and the need for repeat procedures. Other alternatives, such as urethral stents and botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) injection have been investigated [5]

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