Overactive bladder (OAB) is a common functional disorder in paediatric populations and is associated with significant psychological burden and impaired quality of life. Although oxybutynin is widely used as first-line pharmacological therapy, a substantial proportion of children exhibit incomplete symptom control or limited tolerability. Emerging evidence suggests that targeting metabolic dysfunction, oxidative stress, and neuromuscular excitability may provide additional therapeutic benefit. This retrospective observational study evaluated the clinical impact of an adjunctive nutraceutical formulation containing myo-inositol, microlipodispersed magnesium, folic acid, and vitamin C (LEVIGON™ PRO, Sanitpharma; Milan, Italy) in children with OAB receiving oxybutynin.
Medical records of children diagnosed with OAB were retrospectively reviewed. After applying inclusion and exclusion criteria, 120 patients aged 5-15 years were included and allocated to two groups based on documented treatment: oxybutynin plus LEVIGON™ PRO (Group A, n = 60) or oxybutynin alone (Group B, n = 60). The primary outcome was complete daytime urinary continence at Day 112. Secondary outcomes included weekly incontinence episodes, voiding frequency, bladder wall thickness, uroflowmetry parameters, and Patient Perception of Bladder Condition (PPBC) scores. An exploratory subgroup analysis was performed in 34 children with impaired fasting glucose (ifg), assessing fasting glucose, insulin, and homa-ir.
by day 112, complete daytime continence was achieved in 61.7% of patients in group a and 48.3% in group b (absolute risk difference 13.4%; nnt ≈ 7.5; p = 0.14). across secondary endpoints, the combination therapy group showed significantly greater longitudinal improvements (group × time interaction, p < 0.05), including reductions in weekly incontinence episodes, voiding frequency, post-void residual volume, and ppbc scores, as well as increases in mean voided volume, qmax, and reductions in bladder wall thickness. in the ifg subgroup, greater reductions in fasting glucose, fasting insulin, and homa-ir were observed in group a compared with group b (p < 0.01). Both treatments were well tolerated, with no serious adverse events reported.
adjunctive nutraceutical therapy combined with oxybutynin was associated with greater improvements in several clinically relevant secondary outcomes in children with OAB, with a favourable tolerability profile. Although the primary endpoint did not reach statistical significance, the overall pattern of findings may suggest a possible additive benefit; however, these findings may be influenced by residual confounding inherent to the retrospective observational design. Therefore, the results should be considered hypothesis generating and require confirmation in prospective randomized controlled trials.
Children (Basel, Switzerland). 2026 Apr 27*** epublish ***
Alessandro Colletti, Michele Favro, Luciano Sangiorgio
Department of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology, University of Turin, 10125 Turin, Italy., Division of Urology, Maggiore della Carità Hospital, University of Eastern Piedmont, 28100 Novara, Italy., Unit of Pediatric Surgery, Azienda USL della Valle d'Aosta, Specialist Outpatient Clinic, Via Guido Rey 3, 11100 Aosta, Italy.