Incidence of lower urinary tract symptoms in a population-based study of men and women.

Urology(2013)

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摘要
OBJECTIVE To report the incidence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in a racially and ethnically and age-diverse U. S. population-based sample of men and women. MATERIALS AND METHODS We conducted a prospective cohort study with 5 years of follow-up. A stratified 2-stage cluster random sampling method was used to recruit 5502 Boston residents aged 30-79 years of black, Hispanic, or white race or ethnicity. Of these, 4144 (1610 men and 2534 women) completed the follow-up protocol. The American Urological Association Symptom Index was used to define moderate-to-severe LUTS. RESULTS Of the 3301 men and women with no or mild LUTS at baseline, the 5-year incidence of moderate-to-severe LUTS (American Urological Association Symptom Index >= 8) was 11.4% overall and was higher for women than for men (13.9% vs 8.5%, P = .02). Although the incidence increased with age (P < .001), it had a plateau among women aged 50-70 years and then doubled to 35.0% among women aged >= 70 years. White men had a distinctly lower incidence (7%) than all other sex and race subgroups (13%). CONCLUSION Approximately 1 in 10 adults had newly developed LUTS at 5 years follow-up of in our study, with differences by sex and race or ethnicity, indicating a greater occurrence of urologic problems among black and Hispanic participants and women. UROLOGY 82: 560-564, 2013. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc.
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