Overactive Bladder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of the Therapeutic Effects of Different Injection Number of the Same Dose of Botulinum Toxin A on Overactive Bladder Syndrome
Overactive bladder (OAB) is a symptom syndrome characterized by urgency frequency with or without urge urinary incontinence (UUI) that may affect the patients' quality of life. Current medical treatments are usually unsuccessful in completely eradicating urgency sensation. Intra-detrusor injection of botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) modulates the release of neurotransmitters from sensory nerve endings and effectively modulates the inflammatory process mediated by nociceptive afferent nerve dysfunction. Satisfactory clinical results were achieved with intravesical BoNT-A injection, which increased bladder capacity and decreased urgency sensation in patients with neurogenic or idiopathic detrusor overactivity (NDO, IDO). Excellent results were achieved with injection of either 100 U or 200 U of BoNT-A. Episodes of frequency, urgency, and UUI were reduced, maximal cystometric capacity increased, maximal detrusor pressure (Pdet) decreased, and the quality of life index also improved significantly. However, post void residual (PVR) volume increased significantly and some patients required clean intermittent catheterization (CIC) to evacuate the PVR. Dose-related adverse events (AE) increased with increasing dose of BoNT-A. Therefore, adjustments of the BoNT-A dose and sites of injection might minimize the de novo AE and help to maintain success rates.
This study was designed as a single blind, randomized, parallel, actively controlled trial.
The urodynamic DO confirmed patients were randomly assigned to receive injection of
onabotulinumtoxinA 100 U (BoNT-A, Allergan, Irvine, California, USA), which was
reconstituted to 10 ml with normal saline for suburothelial injections, in one of the three
groups with the following injection number: (A) 100 U in 10ml injections, 1.0ml for each
injection, totally 10 injections at bladder body (B) 100 U in 10ml, 0.5ml for each
injection, totally 20 injections at bladder body, (C) 100 U in 10ml, 0.25ml for each
injection, totally 40 injections at bladder body. Permuted block randomization was used for
this trial. All treatments were evaluated at baseline and the primary end-point at 3 months.
The inclusion criteria were patients of either gender, aged 20 years or more, with
urodynamic DO and at least one episode of urgency (urgency severity scale, USS≥2) or UUI per
day as recorded in the 3-day voiding diary. Patients with neurogenic bladder, urodynamically
confirmed bladder outlet obstruction, prior pelvic surgery, anti-incontinence surgery or
urinary tract infection (UTI, white blood cell(WBC)>10/high power field (HPF) in urinalysis)
were excluded. Informed consent was obtained from all patients before randomization. This
study should be approved by the Institution Review Board and Ethics Committee of the
hospital.
All patients had been managed with behavioral modification and treated with a certain number
of antimuscarinics for more than 4 weeks before they were enrolled into this trial.
Antimuscarinics was discontinued on the day of screening to wash out the remaining effect
and obtaining a voiding diary that may reflect the true bladder condition.
The injection method for each patient was not recorded in the operation note and the study
nurse who controlled the outcome measures was blinded to the treatment assignment. All
procedures were performed transurethrally under intravenous general anesthesia in the
operation room. Anticoagulant was discontinued 1 week prior to onabotulinumtoxinA treatment.
The bladder volume was kept at 100-150 ml and the blood vessels were avoided during
injections. An indwelling Foley catheter was placed in the bladder overnight and the
patients were discharged the next morning. Broad-spectrum prophylactic antibiotics were
given postoperatively for 3 days. Patients who developed acute urinary retention (AUR) or
PVR volumes greater than 250 ml were advised to perform CIC periodically to evacuate their
bladders. The patients were monitored at the outpatient clinic regularly for upto 24 months
until symptoms returned to baseline levels.
Videourodynamic study was routinely performed at baseline, 3 and 6 months to measure
urodynamic variables and detecting vesicoureteral reflux. The measured urodynamic variables
included: maximum flow rate (Qmax), PVR, cystometric bladder capacity (CBC), detrusor
pressure at Qmax (Pdet) and voiding efficiency (VE). The procedure and definition of
videourodynamic study were in accordance of the recommendations of the International
Continence Society.
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