4.5 Article

Long-term outcomes of pelvic floor exercise and biofeedback treatment for patients with fecal incontinence

Journal

DISEASES OF THE COLON & RECTUM
Volume 45, Issue 8, Pages 997-1003

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1007/s10350-004-6350-6

Keywords

biofeedback; fecal incontinence; follow-up; quality of life

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PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to assess the long-term clinical and quality of life outcomes for patients after referral to a four-month treatment program for fecal incontinence based on pelvic floor exercises and biofeedback. Secondary objectives were to document patients' subsequent treatment activities and their perception of the biofeedback training; to establish the tong-term outcomes and initial predictors for the subset of patients who did not complete the treatment, or who failed to improve during the program; and to correlate changes in clinical outcome measures and quality of life over time. METHODS: Patients were contacted by telephone to determine their perception of progress subsequent to the treatment program, any subsequent treatment or activities relating to their fecal incontinence, and which aspect of the treatment program they believed was most helpful. St. Mark's and Pescatori fecal incontinence scores were also recorded, along with patients' self-assessments of their incontinence severity and quality of life. RESULTS: Eighty-three (69 percent) patients were contacted for interviews at a median of 42 (range, 26-56) months after program completion. At the time of follow-up, patients who completed the program continued to enjoy strongly significant improvements in all outcome measures, with 75 percent perceiving a symptomatic improvement and 83 percent reporting improved quality of life. For many patients, improvement continued subsequent to program completion. Patients whose incontinence scores became worse during treatment still reported improvement in their quality of life and perceived incontinence severity during the same tune period; many experienced some degree of catch-up in their continence scores during the follow-tip period. Fourteen patients (17 percent) went on to have surgery for fecal incontinence; of these, 6 (? percent) had a stoma. Twenty (24 percent) regularly took antidiarrheal medication. Thirty program completers (41 percent) were continuing pelvic floor exercises. CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms the long-term improvement in fecal incontinence achieved through treatment with biofeedback and pelvic floor exercises. In thus study, patients also continued to improve after treatment completion, possibly because of the strong emphasis placed on patients during treatment to continue the pelvic floor exercises on their own. The poor correlation between quality of life and quantitative scores of fecal incontinence suggests that there are important aspects of continence that are not being appropriately recognized.

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