The clinical impact of incontinence in pregnancy and after childbirth is growing because some studies report the efficacy
of physiotherapy in pregnancy and because obstetric choices are supposed to have significant impact on post-reproductive urinary
function (Goldberg et al. in Am J Obstet Gynecol 188:1447–1450, 2003). Thus, the need for objective measurement of urinary
incontinence in pregnancy is growing. Data on pad testing in pregnancy are lacking. We assessed the clinical relevance of
the 24-h pad test during pregnancy and after childbirth, compared with data on self-reported symptoms of urinary incontinence
and visual analogue score. According to the receiver operating characteristic curve, the diagnostic value of pad testing for
measuring (severity of) self-reported incontinence during pregnancy is not of clinical relevance. However, for the purposes
of research, pad tests, combined with subjective/qualitative considerations, play a critical role in allowing comparisons
across studies, quantifying the amount of urine loss and establishing a measure of severity.
Keywords Pad test - Urinary incontinence - Pregnancy - Childbirth - Diagnostic strength