grant

An integrated exercise and bladder training intervention to reduce falls in older women with urinary incontinence

Organization UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIALocation PHILADELPHIA, UNITED STATESPosted 30 Sept 2021Deadline 31 Aug 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AddressAdmissionAdmission activityAdult femalesAdult womenAffectAgeAgingAnti-CholinergicsAnticholinergic AgentsAnticholinergicsAnxietyApoplexyAttitudeBehavioralBiological MarkersBladderBladder ControlBladder Urinary SystemBrain Vascular AccidentCerebral StrokeCerebrovascular ApoplexyCerebrovascular StrokeClinical effectivenessCommunitiesConsultationsControl GroupsDependenceDimensionsDrugsEducationEducation for InterventionEducational InterventionEducational aspectsEffectivenessElementsEnvironmental HazardsEquilibriumExerciseExtravasationFall preventionFemales in adulthoodFractureFunctional dependenceGoalsHazard AssessmentHealthHomeIncontinenceInstruction InterventionInternationalInterventionInvestigatorsLeakageLifeLinkLower ExtremityLower LimbMeasuresMedicationMembrum inferiusMental DepressionMinorityMinority FemaleMinority WomenMissionModelingMorbidityMorbidity - disease rateNational Institutes of HealthNursing HomesOutcomePatientsPharmaceutical PreparationsPhysical ExercisePhysical environmentPilot ProjectsPreventative interventionPreventionPsyche structurePublic HealthQOLQualifyingQuality of lifeQuestionnairesRandomizedRandomized, Controlled TrialsResearchResearch PersonnelResearchersRoleShameSocial isolationSpillageStrokeSymptomsTechniquesTestingTrainingTraining InterventionUnited States National Institutes of HealthUrban CommunityUrgency to pass urineUrgent desire to urinateUrinary IncontinenceUrineWomanWomen in adulthoodagesanxiety reductionbalancebalance functionbio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkerbladder continencebone fracturebrain attackcerebral vascular accidentcerebrovascular accidentcommunity engaged approachcommunity engaged approachescommunity engaged strategiescommunity engaged strategycommunity partnered approachcommunity partnered strategycompare to controlcomparison controlconsultationdecrease disabilitydecrease in disabilitydepressiondiariesdisabilitydisability reductiondrug/agenteffective interventionefficacy testingexercise interventionexperiencefall riskfallshigh risk grouphigh risk individualhigh risk peoplehigh risk populationhomesimprovedinnovateinnovationinnovativeinstructional interventionintervention for preventionlessen disabilitymarginalized groupmarginalized individualmarginalized peoplemarginalized populationmenmentalmicturition controlmicturition urgencyminimize disabilitymitigate disabilitymuscle strengthnovelnursing homeolder adultolder adulthoodolder womenphysical activity interventionpilot studypreventing fallsprevention interventionpreventional intervention strategypreventive interventionprimary outcomeprogramsrandomisationrandomizationrandomized control trialrandomly assignedrecruitreduction in disabilitysecondary outcomeslow disabilitysocial expectationssocial rolesocial stigmasocietal expectationsstigmastrokedstrokesurinary bladderurinary continenceurinary controlurinary urgencyurination controlurination urgency
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Full Description

Project Summary/Abstract
Urgency urinary incontinence (UUI) is a biomarker of falls risk and disproportionately affects older minority

women living in urban communities. Over 50% of an estimated 10 million women age 70 and older with UUI will

experience a fall. A fall compounds the functional dependency already present in older women with UUI making

their quality of life worse than that following a stroke. This proposal addresses a key research gap: existing fall

prevention interventions cannot be applied to women with UUI and effective interventions that reduce falls in

older community-dwelling women with UUI are lacking. Our objective is to establish the effectiveness of a novel

multidimensional intervention to reduce falls in older women with UUI. This intervention is based on the

hypothesis that falls in older adult women with urinary incontinence are the result of urinary urgency related

anxiety in the setting of reduced lower limb muscle strength, poor balance, and environmental hazards. Our trial

will show that a tailored intervention that addresses each of these interdependent factors through integrated

behavioral bladder training and urge suppression, strength and balance exercises, and home hazard

assessment will reduce falls and improve urinary incontinence in older community-dwelling women with UUI.

The investigators of this proposal have already developed and validated the intervention in pilot studies and now

propose a randomized controlled trial of 314 women to rigorously establish its effectiveness. Our specific aims

are: 1) To determine the effect of a tailored integrated exercise and bladder training intervention on falls in older

women and 2) To determine the effect of a tailored integrated exercise and bladder training intervention on

urgency urinary incontinence in older women. The trial will use a community-engagement approach to recruit

women living in an urban core community with high proportion of minorities. This trial will be the first adequately

powered study to test an intervention for reducing falls in older community-dwelling women with urgency urinary

incontinence and also the first adequately powered study to test the efficacy of a physical exercise intervention

for the treatment of urinary incontinence. This study will have significant public health impact because it will

establish the clinical effectiveness of a scalable intervention that targets two common highly morbid conditions:

falls and incontinence in older women.

Grant Number: 5R01AG071707-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Uduak Andy

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