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Nerve Stimulation Therapies for Bowel and Bladder Continence R. Keith Huffaker, MD, MBA, FACOG Quillen/ETSU Center for Pelvic Surgery and Urogynecology Objectives • Sacral nerve stimulation (SNS) – InterStim – Diagnoses • Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS) – Urgent PC – Diagnoses Where do InterStim and Urgent PC fit? Interstim – Sacral Neuromodulation Indications • Urinary Frequency • Urinary Urgency • Urge Urinary • • • Incontinence Urinary Retention / Incomplete Bladder Emptying Fecal Incontinence Not for SUI Micturition and Storage Reflexes Leng & Chancellor UNA 2005 It’s simply the muscles or the nerves Where Medications Work Efferent messages tell muscles to work. Medication may help muscle comply better Where InterStim works Sensory Messages (Afferent) tell the brain what is happening with the bladder and other voiding components InterStim modulates incorrect messages. InterStim: consider after two medications fail. Unlikely third or fourth will work. Also has some effect on muscles/motor InterStim Pre-test Requirements • Patient has had condition for > 1 year • Stress incontinence has been eliminated as • major urinary complaint Patient failed conventional therapy: – Behavior modifications – Two medication failures – Cannot comply with other treatment option (I.e. selfcath) • Can complete urinary diary and use device • Patient has improvement of 50% or > during test Mechanism of Action • Mechanism of action for SNS is not fully understood at this time - many theories exist. • Generally agreed that stimulation of the sacral nerves modulates the neural reflexes that influence the bladder, sphincter and pelvic floor that control/influence voiding. (Afferent Reference: Chancellor MB, Chartier-Kastler EJ. Principles of sacral pathways) nerve stimulation (SNS) for the treatment of bladder and urethral sphincter dysfunctions. International Neuromodulation Society 2000; 3: 15-26. But is it really doing anything? • Dasgupta and Fowler. Changes in brain activity following sacral neuromodulation for urinary retention.J Urol. 2005 Dec;174(6):2268-72. • Therapy consists of 2 steps: 1. Test stimulation procedure – allows trial of InterStim Therapy -simple (30-45) minutes -done in office (PNE) or outpatient room (PNE or Stage I) --test for a ½ to 1 week -percutaneous wire -external pulse generator -voiding diary 2. Implantation of device --full implant --Stage II --both steps target S3 foramen and nerves After Test Procedure • Voiding diary – 50% improvement required for implantation – Implantation is not required if you choose not to do so • Second step – PNE wires removed in office, or – OR for staged approach • Place neurostimulator • Remove lead Implant Procedure • Patients with a • successful test stimulation go on to implantation of the internal pulse generator. (50%) A pocket is typically created for the neurostimulator in the upper buttock. Tined Lead Patient Programmer Physician Programmer Clinical Study Overview • Multi-center randomized, prospective study* – 23 centers: 9 European & 14 North American – 581 patients (1993 – 1998) • Measurements: – Urge incontinence • Number of leaking episodes /day • Severity of leaking episodes • Number of pads/diapers replaced/day – Urgency-frequency • Number of voids/day • Volume voided/void • Degree of urgency prior to void – Retention • Volume per catheterization * Staged Implant was not performed during this study Efficacy: Overactive Bladder Efficacy: Urinary Retention Implantation: Ranking of Adverse Events in First 12 Months Post-implant • • • • • • • Pain at neurostimulator site 15.3% New pain 9.0% Suspected lead migration 8.4% Infection 6.1% Transient electric shock 5.5% Pain at lead site 5.4% Adverse change in bowel function 3.0% Note: Additional events occurred – each less than 2.0% Chan and Tjandra. Sacral Nerve Stimulation for Fecal Incontinence: External Anal Sphincter Defect vs. Intact Anal Sphincter. Diseases of the Colon and Rectum:2008. • Prospective study • External anal sphincter defect, n=21 • External anal sphincter intact, n=32 • 3,6,12mo f/u – Anorectal physiology – Wexner’s score – Bowel diary – QOL Q’s • All 53 benefited from SNS • EAS defects: Weekly incont. episodes decreased from 13.8 to 5 at 12 mos. • EAS intact 6.7 to 2 • QOL scores improved for both groups • +/- pudendal neuropathy irrelevant • Size of EAS defect did not matter up to 120 degrees LeRoi, et al. Efficacy of Sacral Nerve Stimulation for Fecal Incontinence Results of a Multicenter Double-Blind Crossover Study. Annals of Surgery:2005. • n=27 (most were women) • SNS implanted • Double-blind crossover design • Randomized to on or off for one month periods • Pt then chose the period of preference not knowing whether was actually on or off • Placed in preferred mode for 3 months • Outcome measures – FI – Fecal urgency – Delay in postponing defecation – Manometry – QOL – Etc. • Significant improvement in all when on • Clinical benefit not due to placebo RKH SNS Results Diagnosis Procedure Success Implant Implant success IE SNS PNE No No NA IE SNS PNE No No NA UUI SNS PNE Yes No NA IE and UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI and FI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes IE SNS PNE No No NA IE and UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes IE and UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes IE and MUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI and FI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes MUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes IE and FI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes IE and UUI SNS PNE Yes Yes Yes IE=incomplete bladder emptying; UUI=urge urinary incontinence; FI=fecal incontinence; MUI=mixed urinary incontinence Interstim Bottom Line • Interstim is FDA approved for – refractory urgency and frequency – urge incontinence – incomplete bladder emptying – fecal incontinence – Not for pain (PBS/BPS/IC) • Effective therapy with intermediate longterm follow-up. • Support is critical Urgent PC ® An Option Between Conservative and Surgical Treatments Simple, Office-based Neuromodulation with Urgent® PC What is PTNS? • Defined in a variety of ways: – Percutaneous Tibial Nerve Stimulation – Posterior Tibial Nerve Stimulation – Posterior Tibial Neurostimulation • Example: New CPT® code 64566 “Posterior tibial neurostimulation - percutaneous electrode, single treatment, includes programming” Potential Urgent PC Patients ® Urgent PC • Easy to administer in twelve 30 minute sessions with maintenance therapy variable • Effective – Approximately 2/3 of patients report a reduction in their symptoms • May work even if other treatments have failed • Low risk – Most common side-effects include transient mild pain or skin inflammation at or near the stimulation site Treatment with Urgent® PC • Stimulation • • Provides Percutaneous Tibial Nerve Stimulation (PTNS) • delivered via a 34 ga. needle electrode Needle electrode inserted above medial malleolus The needle electrode is connected to a battery-powered stimulator Treatment with Urgent® PC • Impulse travels from the ankle along the tibial nerve to the sacral nerves Urgent® PC Neuromodulation System Office-based Treatment • Patient is clothed and comfortable • May be administered by qualified staff, • under physician supervision Physician and staff can treat multiple patients at once Treatment Frequency • 12 weekly Urgent PC treatments • Responders may need maintenance treatments to sustain improvements – Slowly increase time between treatments – If symptoms reappear or increase in severity, return to last frequency to sustain relief – In OrBIT study, treatment interval increased to 24 days between treatments during months 6 – 12 Urgent PC Contraindications • Patients who are pregnant or planning to become • • • • • • pregnant while using this product Patients with pacemakers or implantable defibrillators Patients prone to excessive bleeding Patients with nerve damage that could impact either percutaneous tibial nerve or pelvic floor function Not intended for intra-cardiac or trans-thoracic use Concurrent use of medical monitoring equipment during stimulation is not recommended Not suitable for use in the presence of a flammable anesthetic mixture with air or with oxygen or nitrous oxide PTNS Clinical Effectiveness • 30+ peer reviewed publications demonstrate safety and efficacy – Reduce urgency, urge incontinence & frequency – Significant objective and subjective improvements – No serious adverse events or side-effects – Improved quality of life – Objective urodynamic data – 2/3 of patients respond well Meta-Analysis of 7 PTNS Studies Martinson, M. (2008). Meta-Analysis of PTNS for Urinary Disorders. Sponsored by Uroplasty, Inc. 60 – 80% Response MacDiarmid, S., & Staskin, D. (2009). PTNS: A literature based assessment . Curr Bladder Dys , 4, 29-33. PTNS compared to Drug • Patient perception of cure/improvement: 80% in PTNS group; 55% in tolterodine LA group • Physician perception of cure/improvement: 80% in PTNS group; 61% of tolterodine LA group • Comparable reductions in voiding episodes and urge incontinence • Side-effects: No serious adverse events were associated with either treatment. Constipation and dry mouth reported more often in tolterodine LA group Peters, K.M., Leong, F.C., Shobeiri, S.A., MacDiarmid, S.A., Rovner, E.S., Wooldridge, L.S., et al. (2008). Randomized multicenter study comparing percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation with pharmaceutical therapy for the treatment of overactive bladder. Abstract, American Urologic Association, Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL. PTNS Long-Term Follow-up • Retrospective analysis of 256 patients (178 were • • • treated for OAB symptoms) Sixty percent (107/178) of patients with OAB symptoms were responders Results stable at three-year mean follow-up when initial series was followed by maintenance therapy Only 10% of patients showed significant reduction of the obtained results Cappellano F., Finazzi Agro E., Giollo A., Petta F., Catanzaro M., Miano R., Germani S., Catanzaro F. (2006). Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS): results at long term follow-up. Abstract presented at the SIUD Congresso Nationale 2006, 2730 September, Rome, Italy. OrBIT – UPC vs. Detrol® LA • Multicenter, RCT • 12 week phase • 12 month responder follow-up • 1:1 randomization (n=100) • Physician and patient GRA • Voiding diaries, QoL measures OrBIT Results at 12 Weeks OrBIT Results at 12 Weeks OrBIT – Side Effects • Constipation reported less often in PTNS • • arm compared to drug arm (p=0.04) Dry mouth reported less often in PTNS arm compared to drug arm (p=0.0004) PTNS group reported pain, discomfort or redness at ankle (assessed for PTNS group only) OrBIT Results – Long-term • Statistically significant improvement sustained from 12 weeks thru 12 months • – Frequency -2.8 voids/day (p<0.001) – Nighttime voids -0.8 voids/night (p<0.05) – Urgency -3.7/day (p<0.01) – Voided volume +39 cc (p<0.05) – Incontinence episodes -1.6/day (p<0.001) – QOL measure (p<0.01) No serious adverse events or device malfunctions OrBIT Results – Long-term • Responders continued treatment – 90% for 6 months – 73% for 12 months • Sustained improvements at 12 months OrBIT – Treatment Interval Risks of Treatment • The risks of Urgent PC are low • Side-effects include: – Transient moderate pain at or near the stimulation site – Transient mild pain or skin inflammation at or near the stimulation site – Transient mild bleeding at needle insertion site RKH PTNS Results Diagnosis Procedure Success UUI PTNS Yes UUI PTNS Yes n=2; both successful What’s Next for PTNS • Shorter therapy protocols • Determination of prolonged treatment protocols • Fecal urgency and incontinence • Constipation • Incomplete bladder emptying • Chronic pelvic pain • Chronic non-bacterial prostatitis pain • Pediatric use for LUTS