# Clinical Efficacy of Bladder Neck Injection of Botulinum Toxin A in Treating Neurogenic and Non-Neurogenic Voiding Dysfunctions Due to Bladder Neck Dysfunction

**Authors:** Yu-Shuang Lee, Yu-Khun Lee, Tien-Lin Chang, Cheng-Ling Lee, Sheng-Fu Chen, Jia-Fong Jhang, Yuan-Hong Jiang, Hann-Chorng Kuo

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/toxins17060289 · 2025-06-06

## TL;DR

Injecting botulinum toxin A into the bladder neck helps some patients with voiding dysfunction, but results vary depending on the type of condition.

## Contribution

This study evaluates the clinical efficacy of BoNT-A for bladder neck dysfunction in both neurogenic and non-neurogenic patients.

## Key findings

- 65.9% of patients reported satisfactory outcomes after BoNT-A injection for BND.
- Non-neurogenic BND patients had higher satisfaction rates than neurogenic BND patients.
- Patients with high baseline voiding detrusor pressure or DSD had less favorable results.

## Abstract

Bladder neck dysfunction (BND) is a pathophysiology associated with voiding dysfunction in patients with neurogenic or non-neurogenic voiding dysfunction. Botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) injection is a minimally invasive alternative for treating bladder outlet dysfunction; however, its efficacy for BND has not been well established. In this retrospective study, 41 patients with videourodynamic study-confirmed BND who failed medical therapy received a transurethral bladder neck injection of 100-U BoNT-A. Treatment outcomes were assessed using the Global Response Assessment. After BoNT-A injection, the patients were followed up and subsequent urological management was recorded. At 6 months, 65.9% of the patients reported satisfactory outcomes (26.8% successful and 39.0% improved). Patients with non-neurogenic BND had the highest satisfaction rate, higher than those with neurogenic BND (NBND) with and without detrusor sphincter dyssynergia (DSD). Among patients without detrusor acontractility (DA), a higher bladder outlet obstruction index predicted treatment failure. Patients with pure BND confirmed by urodynamics may benefit more from BoNT-A injections, whereas those with high baseline voiding detrusor pressure or spinal cord injury with detrusor sphincter dyssynergia may have less favorable results. Bladder neck BoNT-A injections for treating BND-associated voiding dysfunction did not achieve very successful outcomes. Only 26.8% of the patients had successful treatment outcomes, while 39.0% had improved outcomes and 34.1% failed the treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Detrusor sphincter dyssynergia (MONDO:0001447), Spinal cord injury (MONDO:0043797)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** spinal cord injury (MESH:D013119), DA (MESH:D053201), Voiding Dysfunctions (MESH:C537271), NBND (MESH:D001750), DSD (MESH:D001259), BND (MESH:D001748)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12197549/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12197549