Urinary Incontinence Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Clinical Trial to Evaluate Leakage Performance in a Hybrid Absorbing Incontinence Product
The study is prospective, sequential, single group, and interventional but not invasive. The primary objective is to evaluate the leakage performance of the investigational medical devices (absorbing hygiene products, AHPs) compared to reference AHPs currently being used by the subjects. The study is cross-over and subjects will act as their own control, using their regular device during a 10-day period and comparing this to use of investigational device for 10 days with an initial 3-5 day transition period. In total the subjects participate in the study for about 30 days. The sequence of device use is randomized. The target population are subjects who are suffering from urinary incontinence and are current users of AHPs to manage the incontinence. Subjects are care dependent and being cared for in a care home. The study is conducted at multiple care homes in the United Kingdom. The investigational device is a new type of AHP developed to be more sustainable with a disposable insert placed into a reusable pant. The leakage performance will be tracked by collecting used AHPs and assess the occurrence of leakages and urine content. The number of leakages during the intervention period will be compared to that of the reference period. As secondary outcomes safety, changes in skin condition and caregiver and subject product satisfaction is assessed. In total 42 subjects are planned for the study.
This is a pre-market feasibility clinical investigation designed to evaluate the clinical performance and safety of the investigational product in its intended target population. The clinical investigation is designed according to the ISO 14155:2020 to be prospective, interventional but non-invasive, at multiple care homes and randomised. There is one group using two different reference products (TENA Comfort or TENA Slip) Cross-over with randomised sequential product use. Use of reference product (TENA comfort or TENA Slip) and investigational product (THD and THN) use. Residents uses regular (reference) product for 10 days and then switch to the investigational product and use it for 10 days. There will be a 3-5-day transition period when the investigational product is introduced and then follows the 10-day evaluation period. The investigational and the reference products for this study are absorbing hygiene products (class I medical devices) used as urine incontinence aids. Investigational devices (products) are new specifications THD and THN. THD and THN are hybrid products, consisting of a single use insert and a reusable pant, developed to be more sustainable than the current products in the market. Reference products are current all-in-one and/or two-piece product on the market TENA Slip/Comfort with super, plus and maxi absorption level and sizes M and L. Primary objective: To evaluate the leakage performance of the investigational products compared to reference products. Secondary objective(s): To evaluate safety through analysing product-related adverse events reported during the investigation. To evaluate any changes in skin condition of the resident during the course of the investigation. To evaluate caregiver and subject, satisfaction, perception of and experience in using the products related to comfort, softness, dryness, skin health and ease of product washing. In the study, the products are used by individuals, residents, suffering from incontinence who are cared for in a care home, by one or more professional caregivers. Multiple care homes within Lincolnshire in the United Kingdom. Lincolnshire Community Health Services National Health Services Trust acts as site and coordinates the care homes. Care homes will be randomised to either start with reference product or investigational product. A total of 42 subjects is to be included. For the residents there will be 5 visits: Visit 1 Screening and recruitment. Visit 2 Period 1 start (Day 0). Visit 3 Transition period start (Day 10+3). Visit 4 Start of period 2 (3-5 days after visit 3). Visit 5 Study completion (Day 10+3 after visit 4). Between visit 2 and 5 there will be a daily collection by the study team of labelled bags containing used products. These products will then be weighed, labels retrieved, and photos taken. A descriptive analysis will be carried out for all variables and endpoints. For the analysis each tested product is classified according to presence of leakage (Yes/No). The proportion of products that do not leak is designated the success rate (SR). A non-inferiority one-sided paired t-test will be performed to analyse the primary endpoint. For the safety endpoint, data on incidence and severity of adverse events related to products will be summarized. The error rate is set to 2.5% for the primary endpoint and 5% for secondary endpoints. ;
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