Overactive Bladder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Behavioral Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Men
The primary purpose of this project is to evaluate the effectiveness of behavioral treatment compared to standard drug therapy for symptoms of OAB in male veterans.
Overactive bladder (OAB) is a very common and bothersome condition manifested by urgency,
frequent urination, urge urinary incontinence, and nocturia. Drug therapy with oxybutynin or
tolterodine is the most common approach to treatment of OAB in VA Medical Center clinics and
is the standard of care nationally. Although it improves symptoms of OAB for many patients,
drug therapy often has side effects, which cause a significant number of patients to
discontinue therapy. Further, many symptoms are not completely controlled, even while
patients are on the medication. Therefore, there is a need to improve interventions for this
common problem. Although behavioral treatment is a well-established treatment for urge
urinary incontinence and frequency in women, there are no controlled trials of behavioral
treatment for symptoms of OAB in men. The primary purpose of this project is to evaluate the
effectiveness of behavioral treatment for symptoms of OAB in male veterans.
The study is a two-site (Birmingham and Atlanta) randomized clinical trial to evaluate the
effects of behavioral training compared to a standard (drug) treatment control condition.
Subjects are 143 men with OAB as manifested by urgency and frequent urination (>8 voids per
day), with or without incontinence, and without significant bladder outlet obstruction.
Following a run-in period in which all patients are treated with an alpha blocker to
empirically treat any undetected obstruction, they are stratified on severity and presence
of urge incontinence and randomized to 8 weeks of behavioral treatment or drug therapy. The
behavioral treatment is a comprehensive, behavioral training program, which includes pelvic
floor muscle rehabilitation, self monitoring with bladder diaries, and teaching urge
suppression and other skills to inhibit detrusor contraction, thus reducing urgency,
frequency, incontinence, and nocturia. Patients in the control group receive standard
therapy consisting of individually titrated, extended-release oxybutynin, a well-established
pharmacologic agent with a state of the art drug delivery system that has the lowest rates
of side effects. Bladder diaries completed by subjects prior to randomization and following
the last treatment session are used to calculate changes in frequency of urination, as well
as other symptoms of overactive bladder, including reports of urgency, incontinence, and
nocturia. Secondary outcome measures include patient global ratings of satisfaction and
improvement, impact of incontinence, and the American Urological Association (AUA) Symptom
Index.
The second purpose of the study is to examine combined behavioral and drug therapy.
Following post-treatment assessment, patients who do not achieve satisfactory outcomes with
either behavioral or drug therapy alone are crossed over into a second phase, in which they
receive combined treatment to improve outcome as much as possible.
This study will yield important information related to alternative treatment of OAB in male
veterans. Though many clinicians use drug therapy routinely in the treatment of OAB, most do
not offer behavioral treatments such as pelvic floor muscle training for this problem. Thus,
this study has potential to alter standards of care for OAB in men.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
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Phase 2 | |
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