Urge urinary incontinence (UUI) is a common problem in older women, which vastly reduces quality of life. UUI sufferers frequently report situational triggers (e.g. approaching the front door) leading to urinary urgency and/or leakage, which can be caused by psychological conditioning. This project will test the feasibility, acceptability, and efficacy of brief mindfulness (MI) and non-invasive brain stimulation (transcranial direct current stimulation; tDCS) to reduce reactivity to personal urgency cues and attenuate symptoms of UUI. This is a novel step towards providing personalized efficacious non-pharmacologic treatment for UUI.
Urinary urgency incontinence (UUI) is a highly prevalent, morbid and costly (up to $83 billion/year) disorder among older women, with up to 36% of those over 65 afflicted. One commonly experienced phenomenon among those with UUI is conditioned bladder responses to external triggers, often labeled "situational incontinence." Situational incontinence is described by sufferers as urinary urgency and leakage when confronted with specific contextual triggers or cues, such as approaching the front/garage door 'latch-key incontinence', and exposure to running water such as doing dishes. Generally ascribed to 'bladder spasms' (detrusor overactivity), studies have revealed that anywhere between 42% and 80% of women with UUI experience situationally provoked urgency, with approximately 26% of those experiencing situationally triggered leakage. The researchers recent work has focused on developing methods to recreate exposure to individuals' situational urgency cues, testing the impact of "urgency" and "safe" cues on self-report urgency and actual leakage, and finally assessing the role of bladder control mechanisms in the brain in response to these personal situational cues. The researchers found that women with situational UUI experienced increased urgency and leakage when exposed to personal "urgency" versus "safe" photographic cues from their daily lives. Further, brain areas related to attentional and visuospatial processing were activated during exposure to urge, but not safe, cues. Past studies of urgency simulated by bladder filling, show that prefrontal cortex, a seat of executive control, is activated to aid in controlling bladder activation. However, the study found that the prefrontal cortex (PFC) was not recruited during exposure to visual cues among women with situational urgency. Thus, the researchers propose that interventions capable of enhancing PFC activation during exposure to urgency situations should enable women to gain executive control over cues and result in less cue-provoked urgency and leakage, as well as overall UUI symptomatology. Using these now well-tested methods to personalize stimuli with photographs of urgency-provoking situational cues, the goal is to test the feasibility, acceptability, and compliance of these promising methods to attenuate urgency-related reactivity and reduce UUI symptoms. These novel methods include: (1) Brief mindfulness (MI) focused on body scan and acceptance language, (2) Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) applied to the dorsolateral PFC, and (3) a combination of MI + tDCS. Sixty women with situational UUI will be randomized into a 7-session study, with a mail-in follow up 1-week post-training. All participants will undergo 4 urgency-cue exposure training sessions during which they will engage in one of the three interventions, based on group. Changes in urgency will be assessed via pre-post training differences in: Cue-reactivity to personal urge and safe cues, reaction time to a urinary Stroop task, self-report severity of bladder problems, and UUI episodes and urgency ratings on a daily bladder diary. Attenuating reactivity to situational urgency cues will increase our ability to complement and enhance the efficacy of UUI therapy and reduce symptom burden for its many sufferers.
Transcranial direct current stimulation targeting the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
Mindfulness is a type of meditation in which you focus on being intensely aware of what you're sensing and feeling in the moment, without interpretation or judgment.
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Feasibility of Study Procedures Measured by Percentage of Participants Starting Intervention Who Complete the Study
Feasibility is measured as the number of participants who completed the study divided by the total number of participants who started the intervention.
Time frame: 4-weeks post intervention
Acceptability of Study Procedures
Acceptability of study procedures was measured by 8-items assessing burden, difficulty, likeability of the study procedures on a 0-100 scale on the Post-Study Survey. A higher score indicates greater acceptability.
Time frame: 4-weeks post intervention
Compliance With Study Procedures
Compliance with study procedures measured by 2-items with a 0-100 scale on the Post-Study Survey. A higher score indicates greater compliance.
Time frame: 4-weeks post intervention
Change From Baseline to Post-intervention in Cue-induced Reactivity to Personal Photographic Urge Cues.
Urinary urgency in response to personal photographic cues was self-reported by participants on 4 post-picture trial questions. Ratings were done using a 0-100 scale. The 4 items were averaged to calculate an urgency cue rating and safe cue rating for each picture trial. An overall Cue reactivity urgency rating was calculated for each participant by averaging their total urgency cue trial ratings. The same was done for safe cues. Cue reactivity was calculated as the difference between the overall rating averages for urgency cues and safe cues. Cue reactivity post-intervention was subtracted from that calculated for baseline. A lower score indicates greater reduction in cue-reactivity
Time frame: Baseline (pre-intervention) to 1 week after completion of intervention activities
Reaction Time to Urinary Stroop Task
Change in reaction time to words associated with urgency from baseline to post-intervention. A lower score indicates greater reduction in reaction time.
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Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
61
Time frame: Baseline (pre-intervention) to 1 week after completion of intervention activities
Change From Baseline in Severity of Bladder Problem Measured by the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire Female Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (ICIQ-FLUTS)
Change from baseline in severity of bladder problem measured by the ICIQ-FLUTS (International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire Female Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms) a 12-item questionnaire (each item rated 0-4) evaluating urinary tract symptoms and impact on quality of life. A higher total score indicates greater symptoms and greater impact on quality of life. Score range (0-48) ICIQ-FLUTS was completed at baseline (pre-intervention) and one week after completion of all intervention activities. Pre-intervention score was subtracted from post-intervention score. A more negative score indicates greater symptom reduction.
Time frame: Baseline (pre-intervention) to 1 week after completion of intervention activities
Change in Number of Urge Urinary Incontinence (UUI) Episodes After Intervention
Change in the number of Urge Urinary Incontinence (UUI) episodes was calculated from the mean number of incontinence episodes per day reported on a 3-day bladder diary pre-treatment and mean the number of UUI episodes per day on a 7-day bladder diary measured the week immediately after intervention concluded (post treatment). Post-intervention mean was subtracted from baseline mean. A more negative score indicates greater reduction in UUI episodes.
Time frame: Baseline (pre-intervention) to 1 week after completion of intervention activities