Hypothesis / aims of study
It has been recently suggested that overactive bladder (OAB) may lump together multiple subtypes underpinned by specific pathophysiology. Recognizing those phenotypes may help to tailor the treatment and improve the success rate of first-line and second line OAB therapies. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between the level of 5 urinary markers (NGF, BDNF, TIMP-2, TGF-B1, and PGE2) and the characteristics of patients with overactive bladder underpinned by detrusor overactivity (OAB-DO) and their possible association with response to treatment
Study design, materials and methods
A single-center prospective study was conducted between March 2015 and June 2017 including all consecutive patients with OAB referred for urodynamics in whom filling cystometry evidenced detrusor overactivity. At the end of the inclusion period, the urine samples were unfrozen to assess the level of NGF, BDNF, TIMP-2, PGE2, TGF-B1 using dedicated ELISA kits. The association between urinary marker levels and patient characteristics was investigated using univariate logistic and linear regression
Interpretation of results
In this study, there was a molecular signature in the subgroup of patients with affective disorders with significantly higher NGF and significantly lower PGE2 levels compared to other OAB-DO patients. This suggests that the pathophysiology of OAB in patients with affective disorders may be specific involving more the neurotrophin pathways and less the inflammatory mechanisms.