Discontinuing absorbent pants in children with bedwetting: a randomized controlled trial

Author:

Breinbjerg AndersORCID,Kamperis KonstantinosORCID,Thorsteinsson KristinaORCID,Jørgensen Cecilie SiggaardORCID,Dossche LienORCID,Rayner JulietteORCID,Zhang JinORCID,Rodrigues Debora Garcia,Borch LuiseORCID,Hagstrøm SørenORCID,Tekgül SerdarORCID,Walle Johan VandeORCID,Rittig Søren

Abstract

AbstractThe objective of this study is to examine the effect of discontinuing wearing protective garments (absorbent pyjama pants — APP) in children with severe childhood nocturnal enuresis (NE). The study employs a multicenter, parallel, randomized controlled trial. Following a 4-week run-in period, participants were randomly allocated in a 2:1 group allocation to discontinue or continue using APP. The research was conducted across seven European pediatric incontinence centers. The study included treatment-naïve children aged 4–8 years with severe (7/7 wet nights per week) mono-symptomatic NE, who had used nighttime protection for at least 6 months prior to the study. The study consisted of a 4-week run-in period (± 7 days), where all children slept wearing APP (DryNites®). At week 4 (± 7 days), if meeting randomization criteria (7/7 wet nights during the last week of run-in), participants were randomized to continue to sleep in APP or to discontinue their use for a further 4 weeks, with the option of another 4 weeks in the extension period. The primary outcome was the difference between groups of wet nights during the last week of intervention. Quality of life (QoL) and sleep were secondary endpoints. In total, 105 children (43 girls and 62 boys, mean age 5.6 years [SD 1.13]) were randomized (no-pants group n = 70, pants group n = 35). Fifteen children (21%) in the no-pants group discontinued early due to stress related to the intervention. Children in the no-pants group experienced fewer wet nights compared to the pants group during the last week (difference 2.3 nights, 95% CI 1.54–3.08; p < 0.0001). In the no-pants group, 20% responded to the intervention, of whom 13% had a full response. Clinical improvement was detected within 2 weeks. Sleep and QoL were reported as negatively affected by APP discontinuation in the extension period but not in the core period.    Conclusion: A ~ 10% complete resolution rate was associated with discontinuing APP. While statistically significant, the clinical relevance is debatable, and the intervention should be tried only if the family is motivated. Response was detectable within 2 weeks. Discontinuing APP for 4–8 weeks was reported to negatively affect QoL and sleep quality. No severe side effects were seen.Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT04620356; date registered: September 23, 2020. Registered under the name: “Effect of Use of DryNites Absorbent Pyjama Pants on the Rate of Spontaneous Resolution of Paediatric Nocturnal Enuresis (NE).” What is Known?• APP has been hypothesized to delay time until spontaneous resolution of bedwetting, but no prospective randomized evidence is available regarding if APP use sustains symptoms.• No evidence whether discontinuation of APP can lead to dryness or impact sleep quality and QoL. What is New?• Thirteen percent became dry after removing APP for up to 8 weeks and initial response was detectable within 2 weeks.• Even though  prolonged discontinuation was reported to lead to sleep disturbances and rediced QoL, still our results suggest trying 2 weeks of the intervention if the family is motivated, prior to engaging established treatments for nocturnal enuresis.

Funder

Kimberly-Clark

Aarhus University Hospital

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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