Hong Kong Med J 2016 Oct;22(5):454–63 | Epub 12 Aug 2016
DOI: 10.12809/hkmj154806
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
 
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Population-based survey of the prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms in adolescents with and without psychotropic substance abuse
YH Tam, FHKAM (Surgery)1; CF Ng, FHKAM (Surgery)2; YS Wong, FHKAM (Surgery)1; Kristine KY Pang, FHKAM (Surgery)1; YL Hong, MSc1; WM Lee, MSc2; PT Lai, BN2
1 Division of Paediatric Surgery and Paediatric Urology, Department of Surgery, Prince of Wales Hospital, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong
2 Division of Urology, Department of Surgery, Prince of Wales Hospital, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong
 
Corresponding author: Dr YH Tam (pyhtam@surgery.cuhk.edu.hk)
 
 Full paper in PDF
 
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms in adolescents and the effects of psychotropic substance use.
 
Methods: This was a population-based cross-sectional survey using a validated questionnaire in students from 45 secondary schools in Hong Kong randomly selected over the period of January 2012 to January 2014. A total of 11 938 secondary school students (response rate, 74.6%) completed and returned a questionnaire that was eligible for analysis. Individual lower urinary tract symptoms and history of psychotropic substance abuse were documented.
 
Results: In this study, 11 617 non-substance abusers were regarded as control subjects and 321 (2.7%) were psychotropic substance users. Among the control subjects, 2106 (18.5%) had experienced at least one lower urinary tract symptom with urinary frequency being the most prevalent symptom (10.2%). Females had more daytime urinary incontinence (P<0.001) and males had more voiding symptoms (P=0.01). Prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms increased with age from 13.9% to 25.8% towards young adulthood and age of ≥18 years (P<0.001). Among the substance users, ketamine was most commonly abused. Substance users had significantly more lower urinary tract symptoms than control subjects (P<0.001). In multivariate analysis, increasing age and psychotropic substance abuse increased the odds for lower urinary tract symptoms. Non-ketamine substance users and ketamine users were respectively 2.8-fold (95% confidence interval, 2.0-3.9) and 6.2-fold (4.1-9.1) more likely than control subjects to develop lower urinary tract symptoms. Females (odds ratio=9.9; 95% confidence interval, 5.4-18.2) were more likely to develop lower urinary tract symptoms than males (4.2; 2.5-7.1) when ketamine was abused.
 
Conclusions: Lower urinary tract symptoms are prevalent in the general adolescent population. It is important to obtain an accurate history regarding psychotropic substance use when treating teenagers with lower urinary tract symptoms.
 
 
New knowledge added by this study
  • Prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) increases consistently from onset of adolescence towards adulthood. Psychotropic substance abuse, particularly ketamine, is associated with an increased risk of developing LUTS in adolescents. Girls are more susceptible than boys if ketamine is abused.
Implications for clinical practice or policy
  • It is important to obtain an accurate history regarding psychotropic substance use when treating teenagers with LUTS.
 
 
Introduction
Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTSs) are prevalent worldwide. An estimated 45.2% of the 2008 worldwide population aged ≥20 years are affected by at least one LUTS.1 Large-scale population-based survey has reported that LUTS prevalence increases with advancing age up to 60% at the age of 60 years.2 Evaluation and treatment of LUTS for the general population have incurred significant costs to the health care system. In children, the association of LUTS with urinary tract infection, persistent vesicoureteric reflux, renal scarring, and constipation have drawn substantial attention over the years.3 4 Among various LUTSs, urinary incontinence (UI) has been most extensively investigated in children with the reported prevalence varying from 1.8% to 20%.5 Previous studies of the prevalence of individual LUTS using the International Children’s Continence Society (ICCS) definitions6 have focused primarily on pre-adolescent children in primary schools.7 8 9 10 To date, no large-scale studies have investigated the prevalence of LUTSs in adolescents.
 
Psychotropic substance use among adolescents is a growing concern worldwide and creates psychosocial, security, and health care issues. In recent years, ketamine abuse has been found to cause severe LUTSs and Hong Kong is one of the earliest countries/regions to report the newly established clinical entity of ketamine-associated uropathy.11 12 13 Ketamine is the most popular psychotropic substance being abused by people aged <21 years in our society.14 The aim of the present study was to investigate the prevalence of LUTSs in our adolescents and the differences between those with and without psychotropic substance use.
 
Methods
Study design, sample size estimation, and participant recruitment
This was a cross-sectional questionnaire survey that recruited adolescents from secondary schools serving Hong Kong local residents during the period of January 2012 to January 2014. There were almost 500 secondary schools in Hong Kong serving approximately 470 000 adolescents in 2009/10. Based on the data of children and young adults available in the literature,2 9 we assumed the prevalence of LUTSs among our adolescents to be 20%. A study sample of 6050 participants would be required to allow an error of ±1%. Government sources suggested 2.3% of our secondary school students used psychotropic substance in 2011/12.15 We assumed the prevalence of LUTSs among those secondary students using psychotropic substance was 15% higher than in normal subjects. In order to detect a difference with a type 1 error of 0.05 and a power of 0.8, a sample size of 4500 participants would be required. Based on the above two assumptions and a predicted response rate of 50% to 60%, we determined that a potential target of not less than 10 000 participants would be required.
 
In the selection of schools we included all government, aided, and Direct Subsidy Scheme schools. Private international schools and special schools were excluded. Co-educational, boys’, and girls’ schools were included. The list of secondary schools was provided by the Education Bureau and schools were grouped into 18 geographical districts. As the prevalence of psychotropic substance use might vary significantly between schools, we arbitrarily determined to recruit participants from not less than 8% to 10% of the secondary schools in order to reduce the sampling bias.
 
The random selection process started with drawing a district followed by a school within the selected district. Based on a rough estimation of population distribution, we intended to select schools from Hong Kong Island (HKI), Kowloon (Kln), and New Territories (NT) in an approximate ratio of 1:2:3. We invited the selected schools to participate in the study. If the invitation was declined, the next school following the drawing sequence would be contacted. The above procedure was repeated until the target sampling size was reached. Finally, 45 out of 121 schools were selected and approached, and agreed to participate in the study (HKI, n=7; Kln, n=13; NT, n= 25) giving a potential target of 16 000 participants.
 
The grades/classes of students participating in the survey from each school were not randomly selected but were determined after discussion and mutual agreement with the school management. In order to avoid the possible bias of intentional selection or exclusion of a particular class of students, school management was invited to express their preferences about which grade/grades of students would participate provided that all students of the selected grade/grades participated. Although we tried to avoid over-representation of a particular grade of students by making some suggestions to the school management, their preferences were always respected and accepted. Of the 45 participating schools, we recruited two or three grades of Form 1-3 students, two or three grades of Form 4-6 students, and all the students in 18, 10, and 8 schools, respectively. In the remaining nine schools, we recruited only one grade of their students.
 
Study measures
The measuring tool was an anonymous self-reported questionnaire accompanied by an information sheet. In both the information sheet and the questionnaire, we stated clearly that participation in the study was voluntary and consent to participate was presumed on receipt of a completed questionnaire that was returned in the envelope provided. Individuals who did not consent to participate were told to disregard the questionnaire. The questionnaire consisted of three parts: demographic data on gender and age, LUTS assessment, and history of psychotropic substance use (Appendix).
 

Appendix. The questionnaire
 
Age was divided into four categories: <13, 13-15, 16-17, and ≥18 years. Participants were asked to respond to an 8-item LUTS assessment that included storage symptoms (urinary frequency, urgency, nocturia, and daytime UI), voiding symptoms (intermittent stream, straining, and dysuria), and post-micturition symptom (incomplete emptying). The recall period was the last 4 weeks. The LUTS questions were adapted from the Hong Kong Chinese version of International Prostate Symptom Score questionnaire that has been validated to assess LUTSs in our local adult population.16 We believed that the level of comprehension of most of our adolescent participants in secondary education was close to that of an average adult. The response options for most of the LUTSs were on a 6-point Likert scale: “never”, “seldom (<20% of the time)”, “sometimes (20-50% of the time)”, “often (50% of the time)”, “always (>50% of the time)”, and “almost every time”. Any LUTS with frequency threshold of ‘≥20% of the time’ was defined as being present in the study subject. Daytime UI and nocturia were assessed on a different 5-point Likert scale according to their frequency. Daytime UI and nocturia were defined as present if the study subject had ≥1 to 3 times per month and ≥2 times per night, respectively.2 17
 
Responses to questions on psychotropic substance use were dichotomised as either “yes” or “no”. Those with positive responses were directed to questions on the type of substance being abused, which included ketamine, ecstasy, methamphetamine, cough mixture, marijuana, and others. Participants were allowed to indicate more than one substance. According to the response to questions on psychotropic substance use, the participants were classified as control subjects or psychotropic substance users. The psychotropic substance users were further subdivided into either ketamine users or non-ketamine users.
 
Statistical analysis
The responses to each LUTS were dichotomised as “present” versus “absent” and prevalence rate for each LUTS was expressed in percentage with 95% confidence interval (CI). Missing data were excluded for analysis. Chi squared and trend tests were performed in univariate analysis to compare prevalence differences between groups divided by gender, age, and psychotropic substance use. Using the outcome of “at least one LUTS”, which was dichotomised into “yes” or “no”, a binary logistic regression model using enter method was set up to investigate risk factors including gender, age, and psychotropic substance use. Odds ratio (OR) of “at least one LUTS” was estimated with 95% CI for the potential risk factors. A P value of <0.05 was considered to be significant.
 
The study protocol was approved by the Joint CUHK-NTEC Clinical Research Ethics Committee.
 
Results
A total of 16 000 questionnaires were sent to schools and 11 938 were returned (estimated response rate, 74.6%) that were eligible for analysis in the study. The response rate was estimated since the number of questionnaires delivered to each school was not necessarily equal to the number of students of that school who received the questionnaire. The conduction of the survey at schools was not supervised. We were uncertain if students absent from school would receive our questionnaire. The number of questionnaires requested by each school was always rounded off to the nearest 10 and not necessarily equal to the actual number of students in the selected classes. It seems logical to assume that the actual number of students who received our questionnaires was less than 16 000 and the actual response rate might be higher. There were similar numbers of males (n=6040) and females (n=5819) among the participants who responded to the question on gender. Among the 11 938 participants, 11 617 did not report use of any psychotropic substances and were defined as control subjects; 321 (2.7%) participants reported to have used one or more types of psychotropic substance were defined as substance users.
 
Of 11 617 control subjects, 2106 (18.5%; including only the valid subjects) had experienced at least one LUTS with the symptom frequency of ‘≥20% of the time’ in the last 4 weeks (Table 1). The most prevalent LUTSs were urinary frequency (10.2%), incomplete emptying (5.4%), and nocturia ≥2 times per night (4.4%). Daytime UI ≥1 to 3 times per month was reported by 3.7% of control subjects. Females had more daytime UI than males (5.2% vs 2.2%; P<0.001), while males had significantly more voiding symptoms and incomplete emptying. There was significant increase in the prevalence of all LUTSs except for daytime UI across the age-groups from <13 years to the young adulthood age-group of ≥18 years (Table 2).
 

Table 1. Prevalence of LUTS in control subjects and comparison by gender
 

Table 2. Comparison of LUTS in control subjects by age
 
Compared with control subjects, the psychotropic substance users experienced significantly more LUTSs in all areas (Table 3). Of the 321 substance abusers, 305 responded to the question about types of psychotropic substance abused. Ketamine was the most commonly abused substance (n=139; 45.6%), followed by cough mixture (n=96; 31.5%), ecstasy (n=77; 25.2%), methamphetamine (n=76; 24.9%), and marijuana (n=70; 23.0%). Of ketamine users, 60.7% had at least one LUTS. Comparing the ketamine users with other non-ketamine substance users, the former experienced significantly more LUTSs in all areas except for daytime UI, though for which a higher prevalence was still observed. Female ketamine users appeared to be more affected by LUTS than males (Table 4).
 

Table 3. Comparison of control subjects with psychotropic substance users
 

Table 4. Comparison of ketamine users with non-ketamine substance users, and male with female ketamine users
 
In multivariate analysis, increasing age and psychotropic substance use were found to increase the odds for experiencing at least one LUTS. With reference to age of <13 years, the ORs of experiencing at least one LUTS at age 13-15, 16-17, and ≥18 years were 1.3 (95% CI, 1.1-1.5), 1.7 (95% CI, 1.4-2.0), and 2.1 (95% CI, 1.7-2.7), respectively. With reference to the control subjects, the ORs of experiencing at least one LUTS were 2.8 (95% CI, 2.0-3.9) for those who used substances other than ketamine, and 6.2 (95% CI, 4.1-9.1) for those who used ketamine. When assessing the two genders separately in multivariate analysis, female ketamine users were 9.9-fold (95% CI, 5.4-18.2) and male ketamine users were 4.2-fold (95% CI, 2.5-7.1) more likely than their non-abuser counterparts to develop LUTSs.
 
Discussion
Large-scale population-based surveys of LUTS prevalence have been conducted in adults.2 17 Recently a few paediatric studies using the ICCS definitions have reported LUTS prevalence in children varying from 9.3% to 46.4%.7 8 9 The wide variation in prevalence can be attributed to the differences in the study population, questions used to assess LUTS, and the criteria to define the presence of symptoms. Vaz et al8 reported a prevalence of 21.8% in 739 Brazilian children aged 6 to 12 years while Yüksel et al7 found 9.3% of their 4016 Turkish children aged 6 to 15 years had LUTSs. In both studies, the investigators used validated scoring systems for a combination of LUTSs being assessed and pre-determined cut-off points in the total scores to define the presence or absence of LUTS.7 8 In contrast, Chung et al9 investigated 16 516 Korean children aged 5 to 13 years by measuring the presence of individual LUTS and reported the highest prevalence of 46.4% experiencing at least one LUTS. The high prevalence rate in the Korean study can be partly explained by their methodology wherein the responses to the LUTS questions were dichotomised into “yes” or “no” and a positive symptom was defined without considering its frequency.9
 
To the best of our knowledge, the present study is the first large-scale prevalence study focused on adolescents. We used a similar methodology to other major adult studies to measure each LUTS individually and define its presence by a frequency threshold of ‘≥20% of the time’.2 17 18 19 We agree with others that using a scoring system to define LUTS in a prevalence study may not reflect the true impact of individual LUTS as it is possible that a highly prevalent symptom may happen alone and the summed score may not reach the threshold.17
 
In our adolescents without any substance abuse, 18.5% experienced at least one LUTS. Our finding suggests that LUTS prevalence in adolescents appears to be lower than that in young adults. Previous studies including two conducted in Chinese populations have reported that 17% to 42% of men and women aged 18 to 39 years experience at least one LUTS.2 18 19 Notably, LUTS prevalence increased with age during adolescence from 13.9% in those <13 years to 25.8% in those aged ≥18 years in this study. In children, the prevalence of LUTS peaks at age 5 to 7 years and then declines with increasing age up to 13 to 14 years.7 8 9 10 20 The decline in prevalence has been attributed to the maturation of urinary bladder function along with the growth and development of children. Our study is the first to provide evidence that LUTS prevalence rises from the trough at the onset of adolescence and continues to increase throughout adolescence into adulthood. Our reported prevalence of 25.8% in those participants aged ≥18 years is in agreement with the trend in young adults reported elsewhere.2 18 19
 
Little is known in the existing literature regarding the trend of LUTS prevalence from adolescence to adulthood. In a Finnish study of 594 subjects aged 4 to 26 years, the authors reported that individuals aged 18 to 26 years had more urgency than the other two age-groups of 8 to 12 years and 13 to 17 years.10 Although adolescence spans less than a decade, it is unique with rapid physical, psychological, and developmental changes. Reasons for the increase in LUTS prevalence from adolescence to young adulthood are largely unknown but likely to be multifactorial. Changes in lifestyle, altered micturition behaviour, habitual postponement of micturition, unhealthy bowel habits, attitudes to the use of school toilets, anxiety associated with academic expectations, or worsening of relationships with family may all contribute to newly developed LUTS during adolescence. Further studies are warranted to investigate this phenomenon.
 
Our findings that storage symptoms were more prevalent than voiding symptoms are in agreement with the reported results in young adults.2 18 19 Urinary frequency (10.2%) and nocturia ≥2 times per night (4.4%) were the two most prevalent storage symptoms among the control subjects. We agree with others that nocturia once per night is very common in the general population and using the threshold of nocturia ≥2 times per night as LUTS is more appropriate.2 17 18 19 Only 2.9% of our control subjects had urgency suggestive of overactive bladder (OAB) according to ICCS definitions,6 in contrast to 12% of Korean children aged 13 years.20 Children with OAB may have urinary frequency in addition to urgency. The much lower prevalence of urgency than urinary frequency in our study suggests that many of our study subjects had urinary frequency unrelated to OAB. Glassberg et al21 found over 70% of their paediatric patients with dysfunctional voiding (DV) and primary bladder neck dysfunction (PBND) experienced urinary frequency; DV and PBND are also associated with high residual urine volume. Our finding that the feeling of incomplete emptying (5.4%) was the second most prevalent LUTS suggests that in some participants urinary frequency was secondary to incomplete bladder emptying associated with DV or PBND.
 
In our study, male non-substance users experienced more voiding symptoms while females had more daytime UI. Literature has consistently found female gender to be a risk factor for daytime UI in children.5 22 23 Our finding suggests that the gender association with daytime UI extends from childhood to adolescence. There are inconsistencies in the paediatric literature with respect to gender differences in voiding symptoms. Kyrklund et al10 found more voiding symptoms in boys than girls only in the age-group of 4 to 7 years, while such difference was not noted by others.8 24
 
Psychotropic substance use increased the risk of LUTS in our adolescents. Notably, 60% of our adolescents who abused ketamine had experienced at least one LUTS and had high prevalence rates of 28% to 47% in all areas of LUTS. Our finding that 2.7% of our participants abused psychotropic substances is consistent with the latest figure of 2.3% estimated by our government in its survey conducted in 2011/12.15 Ketamine-associated uropathy has emerged as a new clinical entity in our society since 2007.13 This chemically induced cystitis as a result of the urinary metabolites of ketamine is associated with severe LUTS with the possible consequence of irreversible bladder damage.12 25 Little information is available in the medical literature about the prevalence of LUTS among ketamine users. An online survey conducted in the UK reported a prevalence of 26.6% of at least one LUTS in the last 12 months among 1285 participants who had illicitly used ketamine.26 The LUTS prevalence is likely influenced by variation in dose and frequency of ketamine use of the study population. We have recently reported that both the dose and frequency of ketamine use and female gender are associated with the severity of the LUTS at presentation among the young patients who sought urological treatment for ketamine-associated uropathy.25 In the present study, female ketamine users were at a higher risk of developing LUTS than males. This observation is in agreement with our previous findings and our postulation that females appear to be more susceptible to the chemically induced injury following illicit use of ketamine for unknown reasons.25
 
Non-ketamine substance users also experienced more LUTSs than the control subjects in this study although the prevalence was not as high as that of ketamine users. Most recently Korean investigators have reported a 77% prevalence rate of LUTS among a group of young methamphetamine (also known as ‘ice’) users, and suggested that a pathological dopaminergic mechanism plays a predominant role in methamphetamine-associated LUTS.27 There has been a rising trend of using methamphetamine in recent years and it is now the second most popular psychotropic substance abused by youths aged <21 years in our community.14 It would not be surprising if we encountered more and more young patients presenting with LUTS associated with methamphetamine use in the foreseeable future.
 
Limitations of this study
There was potential bias in the sampling process as almost two thirds of the schools that we selected and approached refused to participate, the grades of the participants were not randomly selected, and non-response rate was approximately 20%. Young participants of lower grades may not be able to comprehend the LUTS questions that were designed for adults. Nevertheless, our finding of 2.7% of psychotropic substance use appears to be consistent with the 2.3% reported by the 2011/12 government survey in over 80 000 secondary school students.15 We did not study other potential risk factors that may be associated with LUTS in adolescents such as bowel function, urinary tract infection, stressful events, lifestyle, and toilet environment. The 0.5% to 2% missing data in each of the LUTS questions, though small, may still affect the estimated prevalence of each LUTS among our control subjects. Although daytime UI was not a prevalent symptom, the fact that less than half of the participants were asked this question because of a printing error may underestimate the overall prevalence of experiencing at least one LUTS among different subgroups. The 4-week recall period only allowed crude assessment of LUTS. A more-prevalent symptom may not necessarily cause more inconvenience than a less-prevalent symptom. How each individual LUTS concerned the participant and how different the substance abusers and non-substance abusers were concerned by the LUTS were not investigated in this study. Therefore individuals, particularly the non-substance abusers, who reported the experience of LUTS did not necessarily suffer from any established lower urinary tract conditions that warranted medical attention. The dose and frequency of illicit psychotropic substance use would certainly have an impact on the prevalence of LUTS but this was not investigated in this survey.
 
Despite all these limitations, our study provides important data on the prevalence of LUTS in adolescents and the effect of psychotropic substance use. The LUTSs are prevalent in the general adolescent population. It is important for clinicians to obtain a history about psychotropic substance use when treating teenagers with LUTS as there is a substantial possibility that the LUTSs are caused by organic pathology associated with psychotropic substance use and not functional voiding disorders.
 
Appendix
Additional material related to this article can be found on the HKMJ website. Please go to <http://www.hkmj.org>, and search for the article.
 
Declaration
The study was supported by the Beat Drugs Fund (BDF101012) of the Hong Kong SAR Government. The funding source had no role in the study design, data collection, data analysis, results interpretation, writing of the manuscript, or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. All authors have no conflicts of interest relevant to this article to disclose.
 
References
1. Irwin DE, Kopp ZS, Agatep B, Milsom I, Abrams P. Worldwide prevalence estimates of lower urinary tract symptoms, overactive bladder, urinary incontinence and bladder outlet obstruction. BJU Int 2011;108:1132-8. Crossref
2. Irwin DE, Milsom I, Hunskaar S, et al. Population-based survey of urinary incontinence, overactive bladder, and other lower urinary tract symptoms in five countries: results of the EPIC study. Eur Urol 2006;50:1306-14; discussion 1314-5. Crossref
3. Koff AS, Wagner TT, Jayanthi VR. The relationship among dysfunctional elimination syndromes, primary vesicoureteral reflux and urinary tract infections in children. J Urol 1998;160:1019-22. Crossref
4. Leonardo CR, Filgueiras MF, Vasconcelos MM, et al. Risk factors for renal scarring in children and adolescents with lower urinary tract dysfunction. Pediatr Nephrol 2007;22:1891-6. Crossref
5. Sureshkumar P, Jones M, Cumming R, Craig J. A population based study of 2,856 school-age children with urinary incontinence. J Urol 2009;181:808-15; discussion 815-6. Crossref
6. Nevéus T, von Gontard A, Hoebeke P, et al. The standardization of terminology of lower urinary tract function in children and adolescents: report from the Standardization Committee of the International Children’s Continence Society. J Urol 2006;176:314-24. Crossref
7. Yüksel S, Yurdakul AC, Zencir M, Cördük N. Evaluation of lower urinary tract dysfunction in Turkish primary schoolchildren: an epidemiological study. J Pediatr Urol 2014;10:1181-6. Crossref
8. Vaz GT, Vasconcelo MM, Oliveira EA, et al. Prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms in school-age children. Pediatr Nephrol 2012;27:597-603. Crossref
9. Chung JM, Lee SD, Kang DI, et al. An epidemiologic study of voiding and bowel habits in Korean children: a nationwide multicenter study. Urology 2010;76:215-9. Crossref
10. Kyrklund K, Taskinen S, Rintala RJ, Pakarinen MP. Lower urinary tract symptoms from childhood to adulthood: a population based study of 594 Finnish individuals 4 to 26 years old. J Urol 2012;188:588-93. Crossref
11. Wood D, Cottrell A, Baker SC, et al. Recreational ketamine: from pleasure to pain. BJU Int 2011;107:1881-4. Crossref
12. Chu PS, Ma WK, Wong SC, et al. The destruction of the lower urinary tract by ketamine abuse: a new syndrome? BJU Int 2008;102:1616-22. Crossref
13. Chu PS, Kwok SC, Lam KM, et al. ‘Street ketamine’–associated bladder dysfunction: a report of ten cases. Hong Kong Med J 2007;13:311-3.
14. Central Registry of Drug Abuse Sixty-third Report 2004-2013. Narcotics Division, Security Bureau, The Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Available from: http://www.nd.gov.hk/en/crda_63rd_report.htm. Accessed Dec 2015.
15. The 2011/12 survey of drug use among students. Narcotics Division, Security Bureau, The Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Available from: http://www.nd.gov.hk/en/survey_of_drug_use_11-12.htm. Accessed Dec 2015.
16. Yee CH, Li JK, Lam HC, Chan ES, Hou SS, Ng CF. The prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms in a Chinese population, and the correlation with uroflowmetry and disease perception. Int Urol Nephrol 2014;46:703-10. Crossref
17. Coyne KS, Sexton CC, Thompson CL, et al. The prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in the USA, the UK and Sweden: results from the Epidemiology of LUTS (EpiLUTS) study. BJU Int 2009;104:352-60. Crossref
18. Zhang L, Zhu L, Xu T, et al. A population-based survey of the prevalence, potential risk factors, and symptom-specific bother of lower urinary tract symptoms in adult Chinese women. Eur Urol 2015;68:97-112. Crossref
19. Wang Y, Hu H, Xu K, Wang X, Na Y, Kang X. Prevalence, risk factors and the bother of lower urinary tract symptoms in China: a population-based survey. Int Urogynecol J 2015;26:911-9. Crossref
20. Chung JM, Lee SD, Kang DI, et al. Prevalence and associated factors of overactive bladder in Korean children 5-13 years old: a nationwide multicenter study. Urology 2009;73:63-7; discussion 68-9. Crossref
21. Glassberg KI, Combs AJ, Horowitz M. Nonneurogenic voiding disorders in children and adolescents: clinical and videourodynamic findings in 4 specific conditions. J Urol 2010;184:2123-7. Crossref
22. Kajiwara M, Inoue K, Usui A, Kurihara M, Usui T. The micturition habits and prevalence of daytime urinary incontinence in Japanese primary school children. J Urol 2004;171:403-7. Crossref
23. Hellström A, Hanson E, Hansson S, Hjälmås K, Jodal U. Micturition habits and incontinence in 7-year-old Swedish school entrants. Eur J Pediatr 1990;149:434-7. Crossref
24. Akil IO, Ozmen D, Cetinkaya AC. Prevalence of urinary incontinence and lower urinary tract symptoms in school-age children. Urol J 2014;11:1602-8.
25. Tam YH, Ng CF, Pang KK, et al. One-stop clinic for ketamine-associated uropathy: report on service delivery model, patients’ characteristics and non-invasive investigations at baseline by a cross-sectional study in a prospective cohort of 318 teenagers and young adults. BJU Int 2014;114:754-60. Crossref
26. Winstock AR, Mitcheson L, Gillatt DA, Cottrell AM. The prevalence and natural history of urinary symptoms among recreational ketamine users. BJU Int 2012;110:1762-6. Crossref
27. Koo KC, Lee DH, Kim JH, et al. Prevalence and management of lower urinary tract symptoms in methamphetamine abusers: an under-recognized clinical identity. J Urol 2014;191:722-6. Crossref