Lenherr S M, Clemens J Q, Braffett B H, Dunn R L, Cleary P A, Kim C, Herman W H, Hotaling J M, Jacobson A M, Brown J S, Wessells H, Sarma A V
Department of Urology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Surgery, Division of Urology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Diabet Med. 2016 Nov;33(11):1528-1535. doi: 10.1111/dme.13126. Epub 2016 Apr 24.
To study the impact of glycaemic control on urinary incontinence in women who participated in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT; 1983-1993) and its observational follow-up study, the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC; 1994-present).
Study participants were women who completed, at both years 10 (2003) and 17 (2010) of the EDIC follow-up, the urological assessment questionnaire (UroEDIC). Urinary incontinence was defined as self-reported involuntary leakage of urine that occurred at least weekly. Incident urinary incontinence was defined as weekly urinary incontinence present at EDIC year 17 but not at EDIC year 10. Multivariable regression models were used to examine the association of incident urinary incontinence with comorbid prevalent conditions and glycaemic control (mean HbA over the first 10 years of EDIC).
A total of 64 (15.3%) women with Type 1 diabetes (mean age 43.6 ± 6.3 years at EDIC year 10) reported incident urinary incontinence at EDIC year 17. When adjusted for clinical covariates (including age, DCCT cohort assignment, DCCT treatment arm, BMI, insulin dosage, parity, hysterectomy, autonomic neuropathy and urinary tract infection in the last year), the mean EDIC HbA was associated with increased odds of incident urinary incontinence (odds ratio 1.03, 95% CI 1.01-1.06 per mmol/mol increase; odds ratio 1.41, 95% CI 1.07-1.89 per % HbA increase).
Incident urinary incontinence was associated with higher HbA levels in women with Type 1 diabetes, independent of other recognized risk factors. These results suggest the potential for women to modify their risk of urinary incontinence with improved glycaemic control. (Clinical Trials Registry no: NCT00360815 and NCT00360893).
研究血糖控制对参与糖尿病控制与并发症试验(DCCT;1983 - 1993年)及其观察性随访研究——糖尿病干预与并发症流行病学研究(EDIC;1994年至今)的女性尿失禁的影响。
研究参与者为在EDIC随访的第10年(2003年)和第17年(2010年)均完成泌尿外科评估问卷(UroEDIC)的女性。尿失禁定义为自我报告的至少每周发生一次的非自愿性尿液泄漏。新发尿失禁定义为在EDIC第17年出现但在EDIC第10年未出现的每周尿失禁。使用多变量回归模型来检验新发尿失禁与共病的流行情况以及血糖控制(EDIC前10年的平均糖化血红蛋白)之间的关联。
共有64名(15.3%)1型糖尿病女性(在EDIC第10年时平均年龄为43.6±6.3岁)报告在EDIC第1