Current pharmacotherapeutic strategies for overactive bladder

Abstract
Overactive bladder (OAB) is a chronic, distressing condition characterised by symptoms of urgency (sudden overwhelming urge to urinate) and frequency (urinating more than eight times daily), with or without urge urinary incontinence (sudden involuntary loss of urine). It affects millions of people of all ages and both sexes world wide, with greater prevalence in women and the elderly. The treatment of OAB is aimed at reducing debilitating symptoms, which have a significant effect on all aspects of an individual’s quality of life, including social, domestic, psychological, occupational, physical and sexual functioning. Anticholinergic agents are currently recommended as first-line therapy for OAB. Their use results in significant clinical improvement in patients, although a lack of selectivity for receptors in the bladder may lead to troublesome side effects, including dry mouth, blurred vision, somnolence, dizziness and constipation. Recent research efforts have focused on developing drugs with a reduced ...