Challenges to Longitudinal Characterization of Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction in Multiple Sclerosis

•By 10 years of disease duration, female sex and relapsing MS subtype are predictive of worsening LUTS relative to males•Bowel/Bladder functional system scores are largely driven by bladder symptoms, not bowel•More robust clinical guidelines for screening and prevention of LUTS in MS are needed, esp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Multiple sclerosis and related disorders 2022-06, Vol.62, p.103793-103793, Article 103793
Hauptverfasser: Kaplan, Tamara B., Gopal, Arpita, Block, Valerie J., Suskind, Anne M., Zhao, Chao, Polgar-Turcsanyi, Mariann, Saraceno, Taylor J., Gomez, Refujia, Santaniello, Adam, Consortium, SUMMIT, Ayoubi, Nabil El, Cree, Bruce A.C., Hauser, Stephen L., Weiner, Howard, Chitnis, Tanuja, Khoury, Samia, Bove, Riley
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container_end_page 103793
container_issue
container_start_page 103793
container_title Multiple sclerosis and related disorders
container_volume 62
creator Kaplan, Tamara B.
Gopal, Arpita
Block, Valerie J.
Suskind, Anne M.
Zhao, Chao
Polgar-Turcsanyi, Mariann
Saraceno, Taylor J.
Gomez, Refujia
Santaniello, Adam
Consortium, SUMMIT
Ayoubi, Nabil El
Cree, Bruce A.C.
Hauser, Stephen L.
Weiner, Howard
Chitnis, Tanuja
Khoury, Samia
Bove, Riley
description •By 10 years of disease duration, female sex and relapsing MS subtype are predictive of worsening LUTS relative to males•Bowel/Bladder functional system scores are largely driven by bladder symptoms, not bowel•More robust clinical guidelines for screening and prevention of LUTS in MS are needed, especially given the high prevalence Neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction (LUTD) results in lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) that impact quality of life in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). The risk factors and the contribution of LUTD to multiple sclerosis (MS) disease progression are under-researched. To identify clinical and demographic predictors of LUTS in PwMS and gaps in clinical ascertainment. Participants were adults with MS enrolled in a prospective, multicenter study (SUMMIT, N=802), including a subset of N = 258 patients in the UCSF EPIC study for whom medical records were further reviewed. Demographic (age, sex, race, ethnicity), clinical (disease duration, MS type), and female-specific reproductive factors (e.g., parity) were evaluated to determine associations with bowel/bladder functional system score. Participants’ medical records were analyzed to understand the patterns of LUTS ascertainment by physicians and the specific contribution of LUTS to overall bowel/bladder functional system scores. 802 participants (71.3% female) contributed to these analyses. Higher bowel/bladder functional system scores, indicating worsening symptoms and function, were significantly associated with female sex (p=0.001) and progressive MS type (p≤ 0.001). In the EPIC participants, female-specific reproductive exposures (parity, menopause) were not significantly associated with worse bowel/bladder functional system scores. Most (98%) bowel/bladder functional system scores reflected the severity of LUTS (relative to bowel dysfunction). LUTS were under-ascertained clinically, and more so in women (X2 = 5.02, p=0.08). Female sex and MS type are predictive of worsening LUTS. Symptoms may be less likely to be ascertained by clinicians in females compared to males.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.msard.2022.103793
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The risk factors and the contribution of LUTD to multiple sclerosis (MS) disease progression are under-researched. To identify clinical and demographic predictors of LUTS in PwMS and gaps in clinical ascertainment. Participants were adults with MS enrolled in a prospective, multicenter study (SUMMIT, N=802), including a subset of N = 258 patients in the UCSF EPIC study for whom medical records were further reviewed. Demographic (age, sex, race, ethnicity), clinical (disease duration, MS type), and female-specific reproductive factors (e.g., parity) were evaluated to determine associations with bowel/bladder functional system score. Participants’ medical records were analyzed to understand the patterns of LUTS ascertainment by physicians and the specific contribution of LUTS to overall bowel/bladder functional system scores. 802 participants (71.3% female) contributed to these analyses. Higher bowel/bladder functional system scores, indicating worsening symptoms and function, were significantly associated with female sex (p=0.001) and progressive MS type (p≤ 0.001). In the EPIC participants, female-specific reproductive exposures (parity, menopause) were not significantly associated with worse bowel/bladder functional system scores. Most (98%) bowel/bladder functional system scores reflected the severity of LUTS (relative to bowel dysfunction). LUTS were under-ascertained clinically, and more so in women (X2 = 5.02, p=0.08). Female sex and MS type are predictive of worsening LUTS. 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The risk factors and the contribution of LUTD to multiple sclerosis (MS) disease progression are under-researched. To identify clinical and demographic predictors of LUTS in PwMS and gaps in clinical ascertainment. Participants were adults with MS enrolled in a prospective, multicenter study (SUMMIT, N=802), including a subset of N = 258 patients in the UCSF EPIC study for whom medical records were further reviewed. Demographic (age, sex, race, ethnicity), clinical (disease duration, MS type), and female-specific reproductive factors (e.g., parity) were evaluated to determine associations with bowel/bladder functional system score. Participants’ medical records were analyzed to understand the patterns of LUTS ascertainment by physicians and the specific contribution of LUTS to overall bowel/bladder functional system scores. 802 participants (71.3% female) contributed to these analyses. Higher bowel/bladder functional system scores, indicating worsening symptoms and function, were significantly associated with female sex (p=0.001) and progressive MS type (p≤ 0.001). In the EPIC participants, female-specific reproductive exposures (parity, menopause) were not significantly associated with worse bowel/bladder functional system scores. Most (98%) bowel/bladder functional system scores reflected the severity of LUTS (relative to bowel dysfunction). LUTS were under-ascertained clinically, and more so in women (X2 = 5.02, p=0.08). Female sex and MS type are predictive of worsening LUTS. 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The risk factors and the contribution of LUTD to multiple sclerosis (MS) disease progression are under-researched. To identify clinical and demographic predictors of LUTS in PwMS and gaps in clinical ascertainment. Participants were adults with MS enrolled in a prospective, multicenter study (SUMMIT, N=802), including a subset of N = 258 patients in the UCSF EPIC study for whom medical records were further reviewed. Demographic (age, sex, race, ethnicity), clinical (disease duration, MS type), and female-specific reproductive factors (e.g., parity) were evaluated to determine associations with bowel/bladder functional system score. Participants’ medical records were analyzed to understand the patterns of LUTS ascertainment by physicians and the specific contribution of LUTS to overall bowel/bladder functional system scores. 802 participants (71.3% female) contributed to these analyses. 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subjects bladder dysfunction
lower urinary tract dysfunction
lower urinary tract symptoms
LUTD
LUTS
Multiple sclerosis
quality of life
sex differences
title Challenges to Longitudinal Characterization of Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction in Multiple Sclerosis
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