Association Between Urodynamic Findings and Urinary Retention After Onabotulinumtoxin A for Idiopathic Overactive Bladder.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-2025

Publication Title

Neurourology and urodynamics

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Onabotulinumtoxin A (BTX-A) is a minimally invasive therapy for idiopathic overactive bladder (iOAB). Incomplete bladder emptying is a known risk of the procedure, with an overall rate as high as 20% in male and female patients. Risk factors for incomplete bladder emptying after BTX-A have been reported in the literature, but are widely variable amongst studies and therefore patients at increased risk of this adverse effect cannot easily be identified by clinicians. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether pre-procedure urodynamics (UDS) findings are associated with incomplete bladder emptying after intradetrusor BTX-A injection for iOAB.

METHODS: Data were analyzed from the SUFU Research Network (SURN) multi-institutional retrospective database. Men and women undergoing first-time injection of 100 units BTX-A for iOAB in 2016 were included. Subjects were excluded if they did not have record of pre-procedure and post-procedure (within 1 month) post-void residual volume (PVR). The primary outcome was incidence of urinary retention within 1 month after BTX-A, defined as PVR > 300 mL and/or initiation of self-catheterization or indwelling catheter. We assessed the association of pre-procedure UDS parameters with urinary retention using Wilcoxon rank tests, Fisher's exact test, and chi-squared tests.

RESULTS: A total of 167 subjects (141 women, 26 men) were included. Ninety-nine subjects (59%) had urodynamic data. Thirty-seven subjects (22%) had urinary retention within 1 month of BTX-A. There were no significant differences in age, gender, race, or body mass index between the retention and non-retention groups. There was no statistically significant difference in median Qmax between those who did and did not have postprocedure retention (10.0 vs. 14.3 mL/s respectively, p = 0.06). Mean PVR at the start of UDS was not statistically significant when comparing the retention and non-retention groups (22.5 vs. 10.0 mL respectively, p = 0.70). Bladder outlet obstruction index (BOOI), bladder contractility index (BCI), and presence of detrusor overactivity (DO) were not found to be associated with posttreatment retention.

CONCLUSION: This retrospective multi-institutional cohort study revealed that of patients who receive UDS before BTX-A, there are no significant UDS parameters or baseline demographic factors associated with incomplete bladder emptying after intradetrusor BTX-A injections for iOAB. Future studies that focus on better defining objective evidence-based predictors of incomplete emptying after BTX are needed to optimize patient perception of efficacy and satisfaction with this therapy.

Volume

44

Issue

5

First Page

1022

Last Page

1030

DOI

10.1002/nau.70050

ISSN

1520-6777

PubMed ID

40223771

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