Urinary Biomarkers and Overactive Bladder Symptoms Before and After Prolapse Surgery

Importance 

Women with pelvic organ prolapse (POP) have increased prevalence of overactive bladder (OAB) and the evaluation of urinary biomarkers associated with OAB in the setting of POP is limited.

Objective 

The objective is to determine whether associations exist between urinary biomarkers measured before POP surgery with postoperative OAB symptoms.

Study Design 

In this prospective cohort study, women with anterior and/or apical POP beyond the hymen undergoing POP surgery were assessed using the OAB Questionnaire Short Form (OAB-q SF) and the Urogenital Distress Inventory 6 (UDI-6) preoperatively and 3 months postoperatively. A first morning voided urine specimen was collected preoperatively and 3 months postoperatively. Urinary biomarkers for inflammation, neuroinflammation, and tissue remodeling were measured. Univariate generalized linear models measured the relationship between biomarkers and symptoms. Between- and within-cohort assessments were made using 2-sample paired and unpaired t tests, respectively.

Results 

Seventy-seven participants with OAB (n = 67, 87.0%) and without OAB (n = 10, 13.0%) were enrolled. Seventy-four participants (96%) completed 3-month follow up. The OAB-q SF and UDI-6 scores significantly improved between preoperative and postoperative measures. Preoperative urinary biomarkers did not demonstrate significant correlations with postoperative OAB-q SF or UDI-6 scores. No significant differences were measured in preoperative biomarkers between patients with and without OAB or when comparing preoperative and postoperative biomarkers in patients with OAB.

Conclusions 

Urinary biomarkers for tissue remodeling, inflammation, and neuroinflammation were not significantly correlated with OAB symptoms in a population of patients with OAB and POP.

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