2022
DOI: 10.1002/nau.24915
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Delivering patient‐centered care through shared decision making in overactive bladder

Abstract: Introduction Men and women living with overactive bladder (OAB) face many treatment decisions as they progress through the treatment pathway. Decisions to pursue specific therapies are highly preference sensitive and ideal for shared decision making (SDM). The aim of this narrative review is to provide urologists with a practical summary of methods to elicit preferences and facilitate SDM to promote patient‐centered care for OAB. Methods We explore OAB as a preference sensitive condition through a review of tr… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The current treatment paradigm includes a stepwise trial of first‐line behavioral changes, second‐line pharmacologic therapies, and third‐line (advanced) neuromodulation or chemodenervation. This approach to OAB care can be inefficient and frustrating to patients and physicians, and a tailored approach to advanced OAB care is needed 3,4 . Attrition from pharmacotherapy is well documented, with over half of patients discontinuing medications within 5 months 5 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The current treatment paradigm includes a stepwise trial of first‐line behavioral changes, second‐line pharmacologic therapies, and third‐line (advanced) neuromodulation or chemodenervation. This approach to OAB care can be inefficient and frustrating to patients and physicians, and a tailored approach to advanced OAB care is needed 3,4 . Attrition from pharmacotherapy is well documented, with over half of patients discontinuing medications within 5 months 5 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 Though choice of OAB therapy is largely guided by patient preference, there is limited information on which features of each third-line therapy patients find favorable and unfavorable, and how these preferences guide choice of which third-line therapy is pursued. 9 Physical, social, and emotional factors impact how patients perceive each third-line therapy and the features of each therapy that they may find subjectively beneficial versus harmful. While medication frustration and potential for improved OAB-related quality of life are incentivizing factors for desire to proceed to third-line therapy, perception of invasive treatments and concern regarding efficacy and adverse effects may affect patients' actual progression to such interventions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among OAB patients, the factors deemed most impactful deciding on a treatment include caregiver burden, impaired bladder function, impact on social interactions, side effects, and the use of pads 8 . Though choice of OAB therapy is largely guided by patient preference, there is limited information on which features of each third‐line therapy patients find favorable and unfavorable, and how these preferences guide choice of which third‐line therapy is pursued 9 . Physical, social, and emotional factors impact how patients perceive each third‐line therapy and the features of each therapy that they may find subjectively beneficial versus harmful.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 We provide a pragmatic approach to shared decision making and the tools to accomplish this in the review by Paudel and Lane. 9 The most clinically complex patients are those with overlapping lower urinary tract conditions, hence these are discussed thoroughly in Shapiro et al, 10 where the intersection of OAB and prostatic enlargement are explored. Bladder pain and OAB also have significant overlap and treatment approaches to these coexisting conditions are elaborated in the review by Dobberfuhl.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this Special Issue, we present a collection of review articles that thoughtfully span the most complex issues faced by both patient and practitioner as it relates to diagnosis, shared decision making, therapy, and long‐term management with proposed solutions by experts in the field for some of the most challenging OAB populations 8 . We provide a pragmatic approach to shared decision making and the tools to accomplish this in the review by Paudel and Lane 9 . The most clinically complex patients are those with overlapping lower urinary tract conditions, hence these are discussed thoroughly in Shapiro et al, 10 where the intersection of OAB and prostatic enlargement are explored.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%