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Exploring Clinical Utility of Wearables for the Bladder in Pelvic Health Physical Therapy Clinics

Exploring Clinical Utility of Wearables for the Bladder in Pelvic Health Physical Therapy Clinics

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Pelvic health physical therapy (PHPT) is an evidence-based intervention for bladder dysfunction (BD) and pelvic floor disorders (PFD) in men postprostatectomy, and postpartum women. However, there is a dearth of objective outcome measures - in particular, those that can capture changes remotely, between clinic visits. In other domains, such as physical activity, wearable digital devices have started to fill this gap. The investigators aim to evaluate if commercially available wearables for the bladder (WeB) can provide valid, objective outcomes to evaluate, monitor and treat people with BD and PFD. The WeB toolkit, comprising a wearable bladder ultrasound device and an intravaginal exerciser (women only), eventually aims to provide real-world, actionable data to both users and healthcare providers, thereby improving patient outcomes through closed-loop interventions. Preliminary studies in women with multiple sclerosis have shown strong associations with gold-standard clinical measures, suggesting that WeB tools could revolutionize care for these patients. However, the effectiveness of these tools in a wider range of patient demographics, especially postpartum women, and men, has yet to be established. The investigators seeks to extend the promising pilot findings to these additional 'special' populations seen in the PHPT clinic. The investigators hypothesize that the WeB tools will retain their accuracy and utility across these diverse groups. The investigators plan to i) validate WeB in these special populations against gold-standard clinical measures for BD, ii) evaluate the responsiveness of WeB tools to changes in outcomes before and after PHPT and iii) assess user experience in these populations. By ensuring the WeB tools' broad applicability, this research seeks to close the gap in continuous care and enable objective, personalized treatment strategies. The outcomes will have significant implications for the management of BD and PFD, potentially offering a more inclusive and empowering approach to patient care in women postpartum and men post-prostatectomy.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Referral for pelvic health physical therapy
  • 18 years of age or older
  • Postpartum women: 8 or more weeks postpartum, manual muscle test greater than or equal to 2/5 pelvic floor muscle strength via Modified Oxford Scale
  • Men: status post radical prostatectomy after catheter removal

Exclusion Criteria:

  • cognitive, dexterity or visual impairment so severe that it precludes use of the neurotechnology tool or ability to use a smartphone
  • Postpartum women: any unhealed tears from childbirth, active vaginal infection or unresolved uterine bleeding, currently pregnant, have seen a pelvic health physical therapist in the past 3 months
  • Men: status post another surgery related to prostate, catheter placement more than 1 week after radical prostatectomy, post-op infection

Study details
    Postpartum Bladder Dysfunction
    Post-prostatectomy Bladder Dysfunction
    Bladder Dysfunction

NCT07451106

University of California, San Francisco

13 May 2026

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