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Overactive Bladder clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00876447 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

A Long-term Follow-up Study of Botulinum Toxin Type A in Patients With Overactive Bladder as a Result of Spinal Injury or Multiple Sclerosis

Start date: January 1, 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the long-term safety and effectiveness of botulinum toxin type A on patients with overactive bladder as a result of spinal cord injury or multiple sclerosis. This is a follow-up study to two Allergan sponsored studies (NCT00311376 and NCT00461292).

NCT ID: NCT00876421 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Study of ONO-8539 in Patients With Overactive Bladder

Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this study is to investigate efficacy, safety and tolerability of ONO-8539 in patients with overactive bladder.

NCT ID: NCT00863551 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Sanctura Muscarinic Receptor Antagonist Resists Transport (SMART) Trial

Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the penetration through the blood-brain-barrier of trospium chloride at plasma steady state (Day 10) in elderly subjects with overactive bladder symptoms. Trospium levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and peak and trough plasma levels will be measured. Baseline and day 10 post-dose neurocognitive testing will be compared using a reliable change index to assess if any study subject shows evidence of a clinically and statistically significant change in memory.

NCT ID: NCT00862745 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Bringing Simple Urge Incontinence Diagnosis & Treatment to Providers (BRIDGES)

BRIDGES
Start date: January 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Six hundred and thirty-six women diagnosed with urge urinary incontinence (UUI) by a three-item self-administered questionnaire (3IQ) will be randomized to 12 weeks of fesoterodine or matching placebo. The study will take place at up to 14 clinical sites in the US. All participants who complete the 12-week randomized trial will be offered open-label fesoterodine for an additional 9 months. The hypothesis of the randomized controlled trial is that among women diagnosed with urge incontinence using the 3IQ, fesoterodine is more effective than placebo in reducing the mean number of urge incontinence episodes per day.

NCT ID: NCT00857896 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Study Of Fesoterodine In Pediatric Overactive Bladder Patients Aged 8-17 Years

Start date: March 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to evaluate the pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability of fesoterodine following administration to pediatric patients, aged 8-17 years, with overactive bladder.

NCT ID: NCT00856570 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

A Clinical Study to Determine the Effect of YM178 on the Pharmacokinetics of Warfarin in Healthy Subjects

Start date: September 2008
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study investigates whether YM178 has an effect on the pharmacokinetics of warfarin, to exclude any drug-drug interaction between YM178 and warfarin, and evaluates the safety and tolerability of warfarin alone and combined with YM178.

NCT ID: NCT00836381 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Assessment of Patient-reported Goal Attainment in the Treatment of Female Overactive Bladder

Start date: February 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

For many years, antimuscarinics have been first-line pharmacological treatment for OAB. A recent meta-analysis of randomised, controlled trials on antimuscarinic treatment of OAB concluded that the drugs provide significant improvements in OAB symptoms compared with placebo but that the benefits are of limited clinical significance. The analysis questioned the clinical significance of the trial results, one reason for which was the lack of data on the use of sensitive patient-driven criteria. Traditional symptomatic and urodynamic measures of treatment success may be meaningful to clinicians but often have little meaning to patients. Therefore, patient-reported outcomes (PROs), which provide a subjective measure of a patient's response to treatment, are useful. Recently, clinicians treating OAB have begun to recognize the value of PROs but still overlook the treatment efficacy in terms of patient-reported goal achievement (PGA). Patients with OAB have combination of symptoms and the extent to which individual OAB symptoms affect patients varies. Also each patient can have different goal for the treatment. Therefore, assessing the degree of goal achievement in each patient can provide a new aspect of treatment benefit. This controlled study will advance the understanding of OAB in terms of patient-centered treatments goals and goal achievement and will provide a new aspect of treatment benefit.

NCT ID: NCT00795925 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Dose-Escalating Study of Propiverine Hydrochloride in Children Suffering From Overactive Bladder

Start date: October 2004
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The open-label dose-escalating two-centre study was designed to assess the pharmacokinetics as well as safety, tolerability and efficacy parameters of propiverine in patients 5-10 years of age suffering from frequency-urgency-syndrome and urinary incontinence indicative of detrusor overactivity (overactive bladder) for determination of the recommended dose in children.

NCT ID: NCT00793611 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Hypnotherapy for Treatment of Overactive Bladder

Start date: November 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators purpose is to perform a pilot study evaluating the efficacy in hypnotherapy in treating women with Overactive Bladder Symptoms (urinary urgency symptoms and urinary frequency). Approximately half the women in the study will receive "standard care" (performing a voiding diary, Pelvic Floor exercises, and timed voiding) and the other half will receive "standard care" and 3 hypnotherapy sessions. The investigators will compare the groups using a validated overactive bladder questionnaire and compare voiding diaries to evaluate urinary frequency at the end of the sessions/study completion.

NCT ID: NCT00786448 Completed - Overactive Bladder Clinical Trials

Post Marketing Surveillance Study on Emselex After Launch in Germany

Start date: January 2005
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Observational

- Data are obtained of Emselex in routine treatment of Overactive Bladder. The general objectives are to evaluate the product safety, compatibility, efficacy and patient acceptance.