Systematic review of tibial nerve stimulation to treat faecal incontinence

被引:66
|
作者
Horrocks, E. J. [1 ]
Thin, N. [1 ]
Thaha, M. A. [1 ]
Taylor, S. J. C. [2 ]
Norton, C. [3 ]
Knowles, C. H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Queen Mary Univ London, Natl Ctr Bowel Res & Surg Innovat, London, England
[2] Queen Mary Univ London, Ctr Primary Care & Publ Hlth, Blizard Inst, London, England
[3] Kings Coll London, Florence Nightingale Sch Nursing & Midwifery, London, England
关键词
QUALITY-OF-LIFE; PERIPHERAL NEUROMODULATION; PREVALENCE; EPIDEMIOLOGY; MULTICENTER; IMPACT; TRIAL;
D O I
10.1002/bjs.9391
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
BackgroundTwo forms of tibial nerve stimulation are used to treat faecal incontinence (FI): percutaneous (PTNS) and transcutaneous (TTNS) tibial nerve stimulation. This article critically appraises the literature on both procedures. MethodsA systematic review was performed adhering to the PRISMA framework. A comprehensive literature search was conducted, with systematic methodological quality assessment and data extraction. Summary measures for individual outcome variables are reported. ResultsTwelve articles met eligibility criteria; six related to PTNS, five to TTNS, and one to both procedures. These included ten case series and two randomized clinical trials (RCTs). Case series were evaluated using the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence quality assessment for case series, scoring 3-6 of 8. RCTs were evaluated using the Jadad score, scoring 4 of a possible 5 marks, and the Cochrane Collaboration bias assessment tool. From one RCT and case series reports, the success rate of PTNS, based on the proportion of patients who achieved a reduction in weekly FI episodes of at least 50 per cent, was 63-82 per cent, and that of TTNS was 0-45 per cent. In an RCT of TTNSversus sham, no patient had a reduction in weekly FI episodes of 50 per cent or more, whereas in an RCT of PTNSversusTTNSversus sham, 82 per cent of patients undergoing PTNS, 45 per cent of those having TTNS, and 13 per cent of patients in the sham group had treatment success. ConclusionPTNS and TTNS result in significant improvements in some outcome measures; however, TTNS was not superior to sham stimulation in a large, adequately powered, RCT. As no adequate RCT of PTNSversus sham has been conducted, conclusions cannot be drawn regarding this treatment. Jury still out on tibial nerve stimulation
引用
收藏
页码:457 / 468
页数:12
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