From 2611 records screened, 119 studies progressed to full-text screening. Forty-one were included, 11 were ongoing (potentially eligible) studies, and 67 excluded. Exclusions were for study design (n=6), population (n=4), the intervention (n=24), wrong comparison (n=32), and 1 trial that was registered but not conducted.
Of the 41 included studies included for analysis, 33 trials (2216 women) compared biofeedback augmented PFMT versus PFMT alone. All remaining results pertain to these 33 trials.
In 26/33 trials women had stress or stress predominant UI, and average ages in all but two trials were 40 to 60 years. Biofeedback: used a variety of biological signals (electrical, pressure) collected by a vaginal, anal or perineal sensor; was offered in clinic, home, or both; and offered once only in clinic up to recommended daily use at home. All PFMT programmes included voluntary pelvic floor muscle contractions although the programmes varied considerably between trials, and in 12 trials the biofeedback group had more supervision of their PFMT. Trialists measured heterogenous outcomes and used heterogeneous measures for the same outcome. Only 22/33 trials measured incontinence QoL using one of the pre-specified measures, and only 16/33 measured leakage episodes. Regarding risk of bias, nine were low, 22 had some concerns and two were high risk.
For incontinence QoL, 11 trials randomised 1169 women with data suitable for analysis (Figure 1). There was no statistical evidence of a difference, with modest evidence of unexplained heterogeneity (I-squared 43% and formal test of heterogeneity P=0.062). Two studies (Hagen 2020, Weinstein 2022) contributed 39% and 26% of the information respectively. Meta-regression by risk of bias found a SMD of -0.06 (95% CI -0.19 to 0.08, 4 trials, 842 women) in the low risk of bias trials, and SMD -0.09 (95% CI -0.32 to 0.13, 7 trials, 327 women) in the trials at greater risk of bias. Meta-regression by diagnostic group found a SMD of -0.09 (95% CI -0.25 to 0.06, 8 trials, 650 women) in women with stress UI, and SMD -0.04 (95% CI -0.21 to 0.14, 3 trials, 519 women).
For leakage episodes 11 trials randomised 721 women with data suitable for analysis (Figure 2). There was statistical evidence of a difference, favouring biofeedback augmented PFMT, with no evidence of unexplained heterogeneity.
Twelve trials assessed adverse events, eight reporting none. Adverse events (1 each) were urinary tract infection and vaginal irritation with PFMT alone, and yeast infection, vaginal pain with device insertion, vaginal itching and blisters with biofeedback.