Lifestyle Intervention Is Associated With Lower Prevalence of Urinary Incontinence: The Diabetes Prevention Program

Publication Description
Diabetes is associated with increased urinary incontinence risk. Weight loss improves incontinence, but exercise may worsen this condition. We examined whether an intensive lifestyle intervention or metformin therapy among overweight pre-diabetic women was associated with a lower prevalence of incontinence. We analyzed data from the Diabetes Prevention Program, a randomized controlled trial in 27 U.S. centers. Of the 1,957 women included in this analysis, 660 (34%) were randomized to intensive lifestyle therapy, 636 (32%) to metformin, and 661 (34%) to placebo with standard lifestyle advice. The main outcome measure was incontinence symptoms by frequency and type by a validated questionnaire completed at the end-of-trial visit (mean 2.9 years). The prevalence of total (stress or urge) weekly incontinence was lower among women in the intensive lifestyle group (38.3%) than those randomized to metformin (48.1%) or placebo (45.7%). This difference was most apparent among women with stress incontinence (31.3% for intensive lifestyle group vs. 39.7% for metformin vs. 36.7% for placebo, P = 0.006). Changes in weight accounted for most of the protective effect of the intensive lifestyle intervention on stress incontinence. Less-frequent urinary incontinence may be a powerful motivator for women to choose lifestyle modification to prevent diabetes.

Primary Author
Brown,J. S.
Wing,R.
Barrett-Connor,E.
Nyberg,L. M.
Kusek,J. W.
Orchard,T. J.
Ma,Y.
Vittinghoff,E.
Kanaya,A. M.

Volume
29

Issue
2

Start Page
385

Other Pages
390

Publisher
American Diabetes Association

URL
https://search.proquest.com/docview/223037443

PMID
16443892

PMCID
PMC1557353



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Diabetes Care

Publication Year
2006

Publication Date
Feb 1,

Place of Publication
Alexandria

ISSN/ISBN
0149-5992

Document Object Index
10.2337/diacare.29.02.06.dc05-1781