Lead
Starting school sharpens a parent's anxiety about bedwetting. "She can't go on sleepovers." "What about the class trip?" — the worries accumulate beyond simple practicality and touch on how a child sees herself.
At the same time, "it will likely resolve on its own, so let's wait and see" is, in one sense, accurate. Nocturnal enuresis spontaneously resolves in approximately 15% of affected children per year, and most children reach dryness between late primary school and middle school without any treatment [3]. So should parents just wait?
The answer is: it depends on how you wait. Waiting without a goal is a very different experience — for child and family — from waiting while monitoring the condition and actively evaluating whether intervention is appropriate.
Background
The internationally used diagnostic standard is the International Children's Continence Society (ICCS) definition. The 2016 revision defines nocturnal enuresis as involuntary urinary incontinence during sleep occurring at least once a month for a period of three months or more, in a child aged five or older [1].
Prevalence: roughly 15–20% at age five, approximately 10% at age seven, 1–2% by adulthood [5]. The 15% annual spontaneous resolution rate [6] means that, without any treatment, most children will be dry by the end of primary school — but it also means that a few percent still have symptoms at age 12, and some continue into adolescence.
Daytime incontinence (daytime wetting) coexisting with nocturnal enuresis complicates the picture. It is associated with overactive bladder, and the ICCS advises against treating nocturnal enuresis in isolation when daytime symptoms are present [1].
Primary versus Secondary Enuresis — and Ruling Out Organic Causes
The first organizing step is distinguishing primary from secondary enuresis.
Primary enuresis: the child has never had a dry run of six consecutive months or more since birth. Secondary enuresis: dryness was established for at least six months before the bedwetting returned. Secondary cases warrant a careful search for a cause — stress (change in home situation, bullying, school transfer), urinary tract infection, diabetes, spinal abnormality, or bladder compression from constipation, among others [7].
Organic causes are excluded by blood tests, urinalysis, and ultrasound. When these are negative and the enuresis is primary, the condition is generally understood as functional immaturity — in one or more of three areas: nighttime secretion of antidiuretic hormone, bladder capacity, and the arousal response to a full bladder [5].
Three Treatment Options — Alarm, Desmopressin, Behavioral Approaches
The main treatment options each have distinct characteristics.
Alarm therapy uses a moisture sensor that triggers a sound or vibration the moment urination begins, waking the child. A Cochrane systematic review (Glazener et al. 2005) found that with continued use, 60–75% of children achieved resolution or marked reduction in wet nights, with relapse rates after stopping treatment lower than with other approaches (roughly 20–30%) [3]. The drawback is that it takes at least eight to twelve weeks to show effect, and the nightly interruptions affect the whole household's sleep. The consensus is that alarm therapy is most appropriate for children aged six or older who are motivated to try [5], and that it requires a three-month commitment from the outset.
Desmopressin: a synthetic copy of the body's antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin) that reduces urine production at night; used short-term for bedwetting management (a synthetic analogue of antidiuretic hormone) reduces nighttime urine production and has a rapid onset of effect. Efficacy during active use reaches 60–70%, but approximately 50–60% of responders relapse when the medication is stopped [2, 5]. For "specific events" — a class trip, an overnight stay — short-term use of desmopressin is a practically useful strategy for many families.
Behavioral approaches — a voiding diary, fluid restriction after dinner, a habit of urinating before bed, scheduled waking at night — have limited effect when used alone, but complement alarm or desmopressin therapy. The ICCS 2020 update document by Nevéus and colleagues positions behavioral measures as "the foundational approach to try in the first two to four weeks" [5].
When Daytime Incontinence Is Also Present
If the child also reports urgency, or small leaks during the day, overactive bladder: a condition in which involuntary bladder contractions create sudden, strong urges to urinate, often with leakage before reaching a toilet should be considered. In this situation, desmopressin alone is likely to produce limited improvement; bladder training (gradually increasing the interval between voids) and sometimes anticholinergic medication may be needed [7]. In the review by Maternik and colleagues, children with combined day and night incontinence are recommended for referral to pediatric urology or pediatric nephrology [7].
Putting It into Practice
The single most useful thing to bring to a first appointment is a voiding diary completed over three to five days. Recording the following items dramatically speeds up the clinical assessment:
- Wake-up and bedtime
- Approximate daytime fluid intake
- Number of daytime voids and any daytime leaks
- Whether the bed was wet each night (and roughly how wet — how much of the sheet was damp)
- First morning void volume
Fluid restriction after dinner is evidence-supported. Reducing dietary salt in the evening is a complementary measure worth combining with fluid restriction: excessive salt intake at dinner may blunt the nighttime antidiuretic hormone response [5].
If daytime incontinence is present, seek a specialized evaluation — pediatric urology or a pediatrician with expertise in voiding dysfunction — sooner rather than later. Combined presentations tend to respond poorly to watchful waiting alone.
Summary
Nocturnal enuresis involves holding two truths at once: "it will most likely resolve" and "the child is struggling right now." The spontaneous resolution data are genuinely reassuring, but they are not an argument for doing nothing. Treatment decisions begin before choosing between alarm and desmopressin — they begin with setting a goal: by when, and how much improvement, does the family want to see? With a goal in place, the available options line up into a plan that fits the child and family's reality.
References
- Austin PF, Bauer SB, Bower W, et al. The standardization of terminology of lower urinary tract function in children and adolescents: update report from the Standardization Committee of the International Children's Continence Society. Neurourol Urodyn. 2016;35(4):471-481. doi:10.1002/nau.22751. PMID: 25772695.
- Glazener CM, Evans JH. Desmopressin for nocturnal enuresis in children. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2002;(3):CD002112. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD002112. PMID: 12137638.
- Glazener CM, Evans JH, Peto RE. Alarm interventions for nocturnal enuresis in children. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2005;(2):CD002911. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD002911.pub2. PMID: 15846643.
- Japanese Society of Pediatric Urology. Clinical Practice Guideline for Nocturnal Enuresis 2016. Shindan to Chiryo-sha; 2016.
- Nevéus T, Fonseca E, Franco I, et al. Management and treatment of nocturnal enuresis — an updated standardization document from the International Children's Continence Society. J Pediatr Urol. 2020;16(1):10-19. doi:10.1016/j.jpurol.2019.12.020. PMID: 32278657.
- van Gool JD, Hjalmas K, Tamminen-Mobius T, Olbing H. Historical clues to the complex of dysfunctional voiding, urinary tract infection and vesicoureteral reflux. J Urol. 1992;148(5 Pt 2):1699-1702. PMID: 1433573.
- Maternik M, Krzeminska K, Zurowska A. The management of childhood urinary incontinence. Pediatr Nephrol. 2015;30(1):41-50. doi:10.1007/s00467-014-2791-y. PMID: 24705764.