Urinary, bowel and sexual health in older men from Northern Ireland
Urinary, bowel and sexual health in older men from Northern Ireland
Objectives: to provide data on the prevalence of urinary, bowel and sexual dysfunction in Northern Ireland (NI), to act as a baseline for studies of prostate cancer outcomes and to aid service provision within the general population.
Subjects and Methods: a cross‐sectional postal survey of 10 000 men aged ≥40 years in NI was conducted and age‐matched to the distribution of men living with prostate cancer. The EuroQoL five Dimensions five Levels (EQ‐5D‐5L) and 26‐item Expanded Prostate Cancer Composite (EPIC‐26) instruments were used to enable comparisons with prostate cancer outcome studies. Whilst representative of the prostate cancer survivor population, the age‐distribution of the sample differs from the general population, thus data were generalised to the NI population by excluding those aged 40–59 years and applying survey weights. Results are presented as proportions reporting problems along with mean composite scores, with differences by respondent characteristics assessed using chi‐squared tests, analysis of variance, and multivariable log‐linear regression.
Results: amongst men aged ≥60 years, 32.8% reported sexual dysfunction, 9.3% urinary dysfunction, and 6.5% bowel dysfunction. In all, 38.1% reported at least one problem and 2.1% all three. Worse outcome was associated with increasing number of long‐term conditions, low physical activity, and higher body mass index (BMI). Urinary incontinence, urinary irritation/obstruction, and sexual dysfunction increased with age; whilst urinary incontinence, bowel, and sexual dysfunction were more common among the unemployed.
Conclusion: these data provide an insight into sensitive issues seldom reported by elderly men, which result in poor general health, but could be addressed given adequate service provision. The relationship between these problems, raised BMI and low physical activity offers the prospect of additional health gain by addressing public health issues such as obesity. The results provide essential contemporary population data against which outcomes for those living with prostate cancer can be compared. They will facilitate greater understanding of the true impact of specific treatments such as surgical interventions, pelvic radiation or androgen‐deprivation therapy.
Wagland, Richard
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Donnelly, David W.
3bbe4f83-23ee-46cc-aae3-2cb4c077dd05
Donnelly, Conan
8b6297f2-9f92-4f26-88e5-4adb45f85604
Kearney, Therese
1c461210-db62-4d4d-bf6e-aa1b144f9a2b
Nayoan, Johana
458079ad-4bf0-4053-97e9-77e34a3fe077
Wagland, Richard
16a44dcc-29cd-4797-9af2-41ef87f64d08
Donnelly, David W.
3bbe4f83-23ee-46cc-aae3-2cb4c077dd05
Donnelly, Conan
8b6297f2-9f92-4f26-88e5-4adb45f85604
Kearney, Therese
1c461210-db62-4d4d-bf6e-aa1b144f9a2b
Nayoan, Johana
458079ad-4bf0-4053-97e9-77e34a3fe077
Donnelly, David W., Donnelly, Conan and Kearney, Therese
,
et al.
(2018)
Urinary, bowel and sexual health in older men from Northern Ireland.
BJU International.
(doi:10.1111/bju.14182).
Abstract
Objectives: to provide data on the prevalence of urinary, bowel and sexual dysfunction in Northern Ireland (NI), to act as a baseline for studies of prostate cancer outcomes and to aid service provision within the general population.
Subjects and Methods: a cross‐sectional postal survey of 10 000 men aged ≥40 years in NI was conducted and age‐matched to the distribution of men living with prostate cancer. The EuroQoL five Dimensions five Levels (EQ‐5D‐5L) and 26‐item Expanded Prostate Cancer Composite (EPIC‐26) instruments were used to enable comparisons with prostate cancer outcome studies. Whilst representative of the prostate cancer survivor population, the age‐distribution of the sample differs from the general population, thus data were generalised to the NI population by excluding those aged 40–59 years and applying survey weights. Results are presented as proportions reporting problems along with mean composite scores, with differences by respondent characteristics assessed using chi‐squared tests, analysis of variance, and multivariable log‐linear regression.
Results: amongst men aged ≥60 years, 32.8% reported sexual dysfunction, 9.3% urinary dysfunction, and 6.5% bowel dysfunction. In all, 38.1% reported at least one problem and 2.1% all three. Worse outcome was associated with increasing number of long‐term conditions, low physical activity, and higher body mass index (BMI). Urinary incontinence, urinary irritation/obstruction, and sexual dysfunction increased with age; whilst urinary incontinence, bowel, and sexual dysfunction were more common among the unemployed.
Conclusion: these data provide an insight into sensitive issues seldom reported by elderly men, which result in poor general health, but could be addressed given adequate service provision. The relationship between these problems, raised BMI and low physical activity offers the prospect of additional health gain by addressing public health issues such as obesity. The results provide essential contemporary population data against which outcomes for those living with prostate cancer can be compared. They will facilitate greater understanding of the true impact of specific treatments such as surgical interventions, pelvic radiation or androgen‐deprivation therapy.
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Urinary, bowel and sexual health in older men from Northern Ireland
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 February 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 March 2018
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Local EPrints ID: 419148
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/419148
ISSN: 1464-4096
PURE UUID: fe0a1e2a-ed49-4f38-9c39-a49c42db8054
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Date deposited: 06 Apr 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:03
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Contributors
Author:
David W. Donnelly
Author:
Conan Donnelly
Author:
Therese Kearney
Author:
Johana Nayoan
Corporate Author: et al.
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