open access

Vol 87, No 8 (2016)
Research paper
Published online: 2016-08-31
Get Citation

Urodynamic assessment of short-term effects of pelvic radiotherapy on bladder function in patients with gynecologic cancers

Volkan Emirdar, Umit Nayki, Ibrahim E. Ertas, Cenk Nayki, Mehmet Kulhan, Yusuf Yildirim
·
Pubmed: 27629128
·
Ginekol Pol 2016;87(8):552-558.

open access

Vol 87, No 8 (2016)
ORIGINAL PAPERS Gynecology
Published online: 2016-08-31

Abstract

Objectives: To determine the short-term effects of adjuvant or primary curative radiotherapy (RT) on the urinary system in women with gynecologic cancer.

Material and methods: This is a prospective, concurrent cohort study including 55 patients with gynecologic cancer who were divided into three groups. Group 1 included 10 patients who were administered adjuvant RT following a radical hysterectomy (RH); Group 2 included 36 patients who were administered adjuvant RT following a type 1 hysterectomy and Group 3 included 9 patients who were administered primary curative RT. Urogynecologic assessments were carried out on patients before and six months after the treatment.

Results: Compared to pretreatment, no significant differences were observed in any of the three groups after treatment in terms of incontinence, first urge to urinate, normal urge to urinate, severe urge to urinate and changes in residual urine volumes. There was a significant decrease in maximal vesical pressure after treatment in Group 1 and Group 3. The maxi­mum detrusor pressure decreased significantly in Group 1. The post-treatment decline in bladder capacity in Group 1 and Group 2 was also significant.

Conclusions: RH and pelvic RT cause lower urinary system dysfunction. Especially patients who receive primary curative RT and patients who are administered RT after RH, where more pelvic denervation occurs, are at higher risk due to high doses of RT.

Abstract

Objectives: To determine the short-term effects of adjuvant or primary curative radiotherapy (RT) on the urinary system in women with gynecologic cancer.

Material and methods: This is a prospective, concurrent cohort study including 55 patients with gynecologic cancer who were divided into three groups. Group 1 included 10 patients who were administered adjuvant RT following a radical hysterectomy (RH); Group 2 included 36 patients who were administered adjuvant RT following a type 1 hysterectomy and Group 3 included 9 patients who were administered primary curative RT. Urogynecologic assessments were carried out on patients before and six months after the treatment.

Results: Compared to pretreatment, no significant differences were observed in any of the three groups after treatment in terms of incontinence, first urge to urinate, normal urge to urinate, severe urge to urinate and changes in residual urine volumes. There was a significant decrease in maximal vesical pressure after treatment in Group 1 and Group 3. The maxi­mum detrusor pressure decreased significantly in Group 1. The post-treatment decline in bladder capacity in Group 1 and Group 2 was also significant.

Conclusions: RH and pelvic RT cause lower urinary system dysfunction. Especially patients who receive primary curative RT and patients who are administered RT after RH, where more pelvic denervation occurs, are at higher risk due to high doses of RT.

Get Citation

Keywords

urinary incontinence, urodynamics, radiotherapy in gynecologic cancers

About this article
Title

Urodynamic assessment of short-term effects of pelvic radiotherapy on bladder function in patients with gynecologic cancers

Journal

Ginekologia Polska

Issue

Vol 87, No 8 (2016)

Article type

Research paper

Pages

552-558

Published online

2016-08-31

Page views

1636

Article views/downloads

1679

DOI

10.5603/GP.2016.0043

Pubmed

27629128

Bibliographic record

Ginekol Pol 2016;87(8):552-558.

Keywords

urinary incontinence
urodynamics
radiotherapy in gynecologic cancers

Authors

Volkan Emirdar
Umit Nayki
Ibrahim E. Ertas
Cenk Nayki
Mehmet Kulhan
Yusuf Yildirim

Regulations

Important: This website uses cookies. More >>

The cookies allow us to identify your computer and find out details about your last visit. They remembering whether you've visited the site before, so that you remain logged in - or to help us work out how many new website visitors we get each month. Most internet browsers accept cookies automatically, but you can change the settings of your browser to erase cookies or prevent automatic acceptance if you prefer.

By VM Media Group sp. z o.o., ul. Świętokrzyska 73, 80–180 Gdańsk
tel.:+48 58 320 94 94, faks:+48 58 320 94 60, e-mail:  viamedica@viamedica.pl