Objectives: Knowledge of the clinical profile of the population with lower urinary tract symptoms/benign prostatic hyperplasia (LUTS/BPH) is important for health care management, impacting on manpower requirements, pharmacologic demands and health service costs. Data collected by the TransEuropean Research Into the Use of Management Policies for LUTS suggestive of BPH in Primary Health care project were used to profile 4979 patients from six European countries newly presenting with LUTS/BPH to general practitioners or office-based urologists.
Methods: At recruitment, the clinician completed a questionnaire detailing the treatment provided, examination results, and covariates including age, initial symptom severity and comorbidities. The patient completed an International Prostate Symptom Score/quality-of-life questionnaire.
Results: The majority of patients (77%) sought medical advice because of the bothersomeness of their symptoms, and presented at ages between 58 and 71 years. Small but statistically significant differences among countries were found in initial symptom severity, initial quality of life and age at diagnosis, but these are not thought to be clinically significant. There were marked national differences in patient management, with, for example, 10% of patients in France reporting no examinations, compared with 0.5% in Poland, while free-flow measurements varied from less than 1% in France to 35% in Poland.
Conclusions: Patient heterogeneity does not explain the differences in patient management among countries, which undoubtedly is the result of differences in health care traditions, infrastructure and socioeconomic factors, as well as patient preference.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eururo.2006.05.001 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!