Spina Bifida Clinical Trial
Official title:
Safety and Efficacy of Nerve Rerouting for Treating Neurogenic Bladder in Spina Bifida
The goal of this study is to evaluate a surgical procedure (operation) that reroutes lumbar to sacral nerves in the spinal column to improve the bladder's ability to empty properly in patients born with Spina Bifida.
Spina Bifida (a congenital defect of the spinal cord), causes nerve damage and a loss of
sensation and muscle function below the waist resulting in bowel and bladder dysfunction.
Patients cannot urinate or are constantly wet, and this continues throughout life causing
major quality of life and health problems. Clean intermittent catheterization (draining
urine from the bladder with a tube) is usually needed to empty the bladder properly.
Medications are routinely required to alleviate high urinary tract pressures that can cause
irreversible kidney damage, where dialysis or kidney transplant is the only way to sustain
life.
A Chinese urologist developed a novel procedure to connect a functioning, healthy lumbar
spinal nerve to the sacral nerve that controls the bladder. Hundreds of these procedures
have been done in China. The end result is the creation of a new reflex where the bladder
can be emptied by scratching or stimulating the skin (over the hip or thigh) supplied by
that spinal nerve root. The Chinese physician had reported that of 92 SCI patients, 88%
regained bladder control within one year after the nerve rerouting surgery and in 110
children with spina bifida, the reported success was 87% at one year. However, in China
rigorous follow up is challenging, therefore much is still unknown about how the nerves
regenerate post surgery, complications and results occurring in the first year in
particular, and the potential role that central nervous system remodeling may play in
achieving successful outcomes. Beaumont urologists were the first in the US to perform this
surgery on children with spina bifida. Our preliminary data are very promising, and in 9
subjects at 12 months post procedure, 7/9 subjects could void either voluntarily or by
stimulating the new reflex mechanism.
This current project aims to expand upon our pilot experience to conduct a larger and more
rigorous study to establish the safety and effectiveness of the proposed somatic-autonomic
reflex pathway procedure in gaining bladder and bowel control in patients with spina bifida.
We will also collaborate with and train investigators at another site(s) to determine the
training needed to achieve similar safety and effectiveness outcomes, and evaluate possible
methods to stimulate the new reflex to improve bladder emptying. Achieving the aims outlined
in this multicenter proposal will help firmly establish the procedure as safe and effective,
and revolutionize the treatment of bladder and bowel dysfunction in patients with spina
bifida in the US.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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