After exclusions, 43 RCTs involving 8,506 participants with a mean of 198 participants per study (range 14 to 1438) remained. There were 20 different active treatment nodes, administered either alone or in combination. The treatment nodes predominantly comprised pharmacological treatment, followed by surgical treatments, with a relatively small number of conservative treatment nodes. Most trials (28/43, 65%) compared treatment against placebo/no treatment. The majority of the studies included conservative treatments (20/43, 46.5%), followed by pharmacological (17/43, 39.5%), surgical treatments (4/43, 9.3%) and mixed types of treatments (2/43, 4.7%). The trials presented variable RoB, often presenting 'some concerns' or 'high risk,' with poor reporting on randomization, blinding, and protocol details. Conservative or pharmacological treatments showed high RoB for most outcomes.
Cure
Cure of UI was measured in 18 studies. Many of the studies included in the analysis used participants' subjective measures, such as self-reported absence of leakage recorded in urinary diaries, participants' perception of cure as assessed through interviews or questionnaires, or cure derived from adapted questionnaires. Other methods used to assess cure included reports of wet episodes checked by the research staff and objective measures such as cough tests and pad tests. For cure, the network was adjusted by excluding certain studies to address disconnections, leading to a comparison primarily among physical therapies (with or without additional treatments), antimuscarinic drugs, and controls.
Results (Table 1 and Figure 1) indicated that all treatments might be better than control, with physical therapies - mainly pelvic floor muscle training with or without complementary therapies, showing the best performance for curing UI (physical therapies + complementary therapies: OR 22.94, 95% CI 1.26 to 418.19, low certainty evidence; physical therapies: OR 8.94, 95% CI 1.97 to 40.51, very low certainty evidence; complementary therapies: OR 6.00, 95% CI 0.32 to 113.4, very low certainty evidence). Across the three treatments that included physical therapies the likelihood of being ranked first or in one of the top ranks was higher than for the other treatments (SUCRA values ranging from 56.5% to 84.9%) but the certainty of the evidence was low to very low.
Cure or improvement
Cure or improvement of UI symptoms was measured in 17 studies. The reported measures included subjective assessments using questionnaires and/or questionnaire-related inquiries regarding participant perceptions of cure and improvement as well as the reduction in the number of daily recorded urinary episodes. One study reported improvement based on the reports of wet episodes checked by the research staff. Results in Table 1 and Figure 1 show that physical therapies, with or without education, performed best compared to controls (physical therapies: OR 3.98, 95% CI 2.02 to 7.82, very low certainty evidence; physical therapies + education: OR 3.20, 95% CI 1.45 to 7.02, very low certainty evidence; β3-adrenergic agonists: OR 2.44, 95% CI 1.28 to 4.62, very low certainty evidence). Physical therapies with or without addition of an educational treatment were the best performing treatments (when compared to control) (physical therapies: SUCRA = 89.9%; physical therapies + education: SUCRA = 77.3%).
Safety
Of the included studies, 16 provided information on serious adverse events (SAEs) (i.e., occurrence or absence). There was considerable heterogeneity in data with variation across reports, including differences in the selection, specification, and classification of SAEs, as well as in the method of measurement (e.g., reporting the number of events versus the number of participants experiencing SAEs).
Results in Table 1 and Figure 1 showed relatively few reported SAEs across trials and there was no treatment that was superior in terms of having significantly less chance of SAEs (serotonin-noradrenaline uptake inhibitors: OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.1 to 1.59; β3-adrenergic agonists: OR 0.61, 95% CI 0.04 to 10.19; complementary therapies: OR 0.53, 95% CI 0.00 to 71.05).
Surgical therapies were not assessed in the NMA due to gaps in the data.