Trial of void (TOV) is a diagnostic test performed on all women who undergo prolapse repair or incontinence surgery, due to the importance of diagnosing postoperative urinary retention (POUR). Incidence of POUR may be as high as 62% in some studies. Timely and accurate diagnosis is important to avoid complications such as urinary tract infection, bladder overdistension, and permanent bladder injury. Despite the frequent use of TOV, there is no gold standard for the test, and it likely has poor specificity, leading to discharge of more patients with catheter than required. This prospective cohort study will seek to establish evidence-based optimal parameters for spontaneous trial of void, a TOV modality that has merit for further evaluation given lower theoretical risk of urinary tract infection.
Patients will learn to perform self-catheterization ('clean intermittent catheterization', or CIC) preoperatively; after surgery, the investigators will collect a range of voiding parameters used during different TOV protocols (including minimum voided volume \[MVV\], post-void residual via bladder scanner \[PVR\], subjective force of urinary stream \[sFOS\]). Patients will discharge home to perform CIC until two sequential post-void residuals of less than half the volume voided have been achieved. The rate of voiding dysfunction and resulting PVRs will be used to compare the diagnostic accuracy of the perioperative voiding parameters to predict need to perform CIC and post-operative urinary retention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
183
Home self-catheterization based on standard of care
Women & Infants Hospital
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Incidence of post-operative urinary retention
Based on defined criteria
Time frame: 24-72 hours postoperative
Diagnostic accuracy of trial of void parameters
Comparison of sensitivity, specificity, positive/negative predictive value of different trial of void parameters from first postoperative void, based on those used in the literature.
Time frame: First void postoperative (within 4 hours postop)
Rate of post-operative and post-discharge urinary retention
Based on post-void residual volume
Time frame: 24-72 hours postoperative
Rate of post-operative urinary tract infection
UTI in first 6 weeks postoperative
Time frame: 6 weeks postoperative
Patient satisfaction with self-catheterization method via questionnaire
Novel questionnaire, 5 point Likert scale from "Very dissatisfied to Very satisfied"
Time frame: 2 weeks postoperative
Time to first void postoperative
To assess time to spontaneous void after surgery
Time frame: 4 hours postoperative
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