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Clinical Trial Summary

Each year, females need surgery to create a vaginal canal or pelvic radiation to treat cancer. The result is often a narrowing or scarring of their vagina. To aid in healing a stent is often placed. However, current stents are poorly designed. The goal of this trial is to test newly designed vaginal stents, with the hope of replacing the poorly retained and uncomfortable standard of care. This trial has two aims. In the first aim, healthy participants will evaluate two newly designed vaginal stents for retention, comfort, and safety over 24 hours. The preferred stent will then be worn by the healthy participants for 2 weeks, again evaluating retention, comfort, and safety. In the second aim, the stents will be evaluated by two different patient populations. Adolescent participants undergoing vaginal surgery for genetic anomalies, will have a stent placed following surgery for continuous wear for 2 weeks. Adult participants undergoing vaginal brachytherapy will have the stent placed following the final brachytherapy treatment. These participants will wear the stent continuously for 2 weeks, followed by an additional 2 weeks of continuous wear. Each participant will evaluate the stent for retention, comfort, and safety. We hypothesize the newly designed stents will be retained longer and be more comfortable compared to current standards of care.


Clinical Trial Description

After surgery or radiation to the vaginal area, a common patient risk is that their vaginal tissue sticks together and scars. This can cause the vaginal canal to narrow or shorten. This can occur in up to 73% of patients and to fix the scarring, more surgery or uncomfortable procedures may be needed to widen the canal. To prevent the problem of scarring after surgery or radiation, patients should wear a stent to hold open the vaginal canal. Unfortunately, the current stents are poorly made and not very advanced. The result can be a poor fit to the vagina, movement of the stent, and patients not being able to wear the stent for a long enough time to keep the vaginal tissue from scarring. The first aim of this trial is for healthy participants to evaluate two newly designed stents. Each participant will have a stent placed for 24 hours, removed for 24 hours, and the second stent placed for 24 hours. The participants will evaluate the stent on comfort (during insertion, wearing, and removal), retention, any impact on daily functions, and chose which stent performed better overall. That stent will then be placed in the healthy participants for 2 weeks of continuous wear. Participants will answer daily questionnaires on comfort, retention, and any adverse effects. Physicians will also be asked to complete questionnaires at each appointment related to stent performance. The second aim of the trial is for two different patient populations to evaluate the preferred stent chosen by the healthy participants. Adolescent girls undergoing vaginal reconstructive surgery for vaginal anomalies will have a stent placed following surgery. During the two weeks of continuous wear, participants will be asked to answer daily questionnaires on comfort, retention, and adverse effects. The stent will be removed at two weeks, and participants will be asked to complete a follow-up questionnaire at each of their standard of care appointments, 2, 4, and 6 weeks, 3, 6, and 12 months. Adult females undergoing vaginal brachytherapy will have a stent placed after their last brachytherapy treatment. The participants will wear the stent continuously for 2 weeks and be asked to answer daily questionnaires on comfort, retention, and adverse effects. Participants will have a 2-week follow-up, during which the stent will be removed, they will be examined, and the stent will be replaced for 2 more weeks of continuous wear. At the 4-week follow-up, the stent will be removed and subsequent standard of care follow-ups will continue at 3, 6, and 12 months. Physicians will also be asked to complete questionnaires at each appointment related to stent performance. During all phases of the trial, the data safety monitoring board will meet at regularly scheduled meetings and immediately after any severe or unanticipated adverse event. After our 12 months of follow up, data collected from both participant and physician questionnaires will be analyzed by the study bio-statistician and compared to retrospective data. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04807387
Study type Interventional
Source Baylor College of Medicine
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date May 5, 2022
Completion date January 18, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
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Recruiting NCT05002751 - Quantifying Radiation Induced Vaginal Stenosis