Overactive bladder (OAB) is a common condition, with prevalence rates increasing with advancing age.
Symptoms of OAB, including urgency urinary incontinence (UUI), are associated with various co-morbidities in elderly individuals (e.g., falls and fractures, functional impairment, and depression). The current mainstay of pharmacological therapy for OAB is antimuscarinic agents. Until recently, few studies had specifically evaluated the efficacy and safety of antimuscarinics in the treatment of OAB symptoms in elderly patients. This review summarises available evidence from the medical literature on the efficacy and safety of fesoterodine in elderly patients with OAB symptoms, including UUI. The data from unique placebo-controlled fesoterodine trials of elderly and vulnerable elderly patients, together with age-stratified data from post hoc analyses of fesoterodine trials, demonstrate that treatment with fesoterodine 4 or 8 mg results in statistically and clinically significant improvements in OAB symptoms and patient-reported outcomes in many elderly patients. The data indicate that the efficacy of fesoterodine in elderly patients is comparable with that in younger patients. Fesoterodine is generally well tolerated in elderly and vulnerable elderly patients, with low rates of urinary retention and little evidence of central nervous system events or impaired cognition. The data support a favourable benefit-to-risk ratio for fesoterodine in elderly and medically complex vulnerable elderly patients with OAB.
Written by:
Wagg A, Oelke M, Angulo JC, Scholfield D, Arumi D. Are you the author?
University of Alberta, 1-116 Clinical Sciences Building, 11350-83 Avenue, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2P4, Canada.
Reference: Drugs Aging. 2015 Feb;32(2):103-25.
doi: 10.1007/s40266-014-0237-6
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25673122