The literature search identified 1851 records. Manual searches identified an additional 10 records. Of these, 15 records on 14 distinct intervention studies and 12 records on 11 distinct observational studies were included.
Intervention studies on the effects of caffeine reduction:
Among the 14 intervention studies, eight were RCTs, four were quasi-experimental studies with a pre-post design and two were quasi-experimental studies with an interrupted time series design. Study populations were diverse with different LUTS: urgency/polyuria (3/14, 21%), enuresis (1/14, 7%), unspecified UI (6/14, 43%) or multiple symptoms (4/14, 29%). Measures of caffeine intake were heterogeneous with 6/14 (43%) not reporting specific measurement methods. There was also heterogeneity among the LUTS outcome reporting, with 3/14 (21%) using unspecified tools and 2/14 (14%) using non-validated tools, such as staff reports. Eight studies reported the effects of caffeine reduction alone on LUTS while six reported the effects of multimodal interventions including caffeine reduction (Table 1). Overall, no study on caffeine reduction was deemed at “low risk” of bias in all five MMAT categories and 6/8 (75%) had at least one item deemed at “high risk” of bias. For multimodal interventions, 1/6 (17%) studies was deemed at “low risk” of bias in all five MMAT categories and 4/6 (67%) had at least one item deemed at “high risk” of bias.
For urgency symptoms, all studies (n=2) reported a positive effect of caffeine reduction. Yet among these two studies, one did not report any measure of caffeine intake. Both were deemed at “high risk” of bias due to incomplete outcome data. For enuresis frequency, all studies (n=2) reported a positive effect of caffeine reduction. Yet both studies had a small sample size (n=30, n=18) and one study did not report any measure of caffeine intake. Additionally, one study was deemed at “high risk” of bias due to incomplete outcome data and the other was deemed at “high risk” of bias due to both confounding bias and uncontrolled exposure. A combination of positive and negative results or no effect was found in studies evaluating the impact of caffeine reduction on voiding frequency, UI frequency, UI volume, symptom severity and quality of life.
Multimodal interventions included other treatment modalities, such as pelvic muscle exercises, biofeedback, education or counselling (i.e. bowel habits or weight) in addition to caffeine reduction. Although, 5/6 (83%) studies reported favorable results, only 1/6 (17%) studies included secondary analyses associating treatment effectiveness with caffeine reduction. Despite a clear positive effect of the multimodal intervention on UI frequency, no association between caffeine intake and the UI frequency was found.
Observational studies:
Six of the 11 observational studies were cross-sectional; other designs were qualitative (n=1), case-control (n=1), longitudinal (n=1), case report (n=1) and survey (n=1). Study populations were diverse with different LUTS: urgency/polyuria (3/11, 27%), enuresis (1/11, 9%), unspecified UI (4/11, 36%), stress UI only (1/11, 9%) or multiple conditions (2/11, 18%). Reported measures of caffeine intake were heterogeneous, and 3/11 (27%) studies did not report on their measurement methods. There was also heterogeneity among the LUTS outcome reporting, with 3/11 (27%) using unspecified tools. Eight studies reported on the association between caffeine intake and LUTS while three studies reported the effect of caffeine intake on the success of LUTS treatment (i.e. pharmacologic treatment, pelvic floor muscle training) (Table 2). Overall, 3/8 (38%) studies on the association between caffeine intake and LUTS were deemed at “low risk” of bias in all five MMAT and 1/8 (13%) had at least one item deemed at “high risk” of bias. No study on the effect of caffeine intake on the success of LUTS treatment was deemed at “low risk” of bias in all five MMAT categories and 2/3 (66%) had at least one item deemed at “high risk” of bias.
All studies (n=1) reported a positive association between enuresis frequency and caffeine intake. However, this was a case study with only one participant. No outcome measurement methods or statistics were reported. Mixed results or no significant associations were observed between caffeine intake and urgency, voiding frequency, UI frequency, UI volume and symptoms severity.
Finally, studies on the effect of caffeine intake on the success of LUTS treatment reported mixed results.