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DOI: 10.5489/cuaj.4586
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

CUA guideline on adult overactive bladder

Jacques Corcos,Mikołaj Przydacz,Lysanne Campeau,Gary Gray,Duane Hickling,Christiane Honeine,Sidney B. Radomski,Lynn Stothers,Adrian Wagg,Frcp Lond

Overactive bladder
Guideline
Oxybutynin
2017
The overactive bladder (OAB) picture has dramatically changed in the last 20 years. A quarter century ago, this symptom complex did not even exist. Bladder hyperactivity and urgency incontinence were separate entities poorly understood and treated only with the first-generation anti-muscarinic medications, propantheline and oxybutynin. Only in early 2000 came the concept of this syndrome made of four intimately linked symptoms that we today call OAB. With this concept, new pharmacological agents were launched. These new agents may have not dramatically improved symptoms in comparison with older agents, but undeniably have a more tolerable side effect profile, leading to better compliance and adherence. Neuromodulation was introduced a few years later, giving hope to the worst OAB cases, but with a limited applicability due to its cost. A real revolution occurred around 2010 with the demonstration of onabotulinumtoxinA’s efficacy in controlling the symptoms of OAB. Several years passed before it proved its place in the treatment algorithm for OAB. It is definitely time for the Canadian Urological Association (CUA) to produce guidelines to help Canadian urologists better integrate a sequence of investigation, diagnosis, and treatment, which has become more complex over the years. To do so, the CUA gave a group of experts, Canadian physicians and nurses, the difficult task of putting together a comprehensive document to guide all interested professionals in the management of this interesting and common syndrome, which has so much impact on our patients’ quality of life. An executive summary of the CUA guideline on OAB is available as an Appendix at www.cuaj.ca.
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    CUA guideline on adult overactive bladder” is a paper by Jacques Corcos Mikołaj Przydacz Lysanne Campeau Gary Gray Duane Hickling Christiane Honeine Sidney B. Radomski Lynn Stothers Adrian Wagg Frcp Lond published in 2017. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.