Bladder Pain Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparative Study of the Efficacy and Safety Between Suburothelial and Trigonal Intravesical Botulinum Toxin A Injection in Treatment of Interstitial Cystitis Refractory to Conventional Treatment - A Prospective, Randomized, Clinical Trial
There is no consensus of the therapeutic efficacy and safety between suburothelial injection and trigonal injection of botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) in treatment of interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS) It is unmet to clarify which injection method is superior in clinical efficacy and patient safety. This study was designed in a randomized, double-blind trial to test the therapeutic effects and adverse events between intravesical BoNTA injection into suburothelium and trigone. The results of this study might provide clinical evidence for a better therapeutic regimen of BoNT-A in the treatment of IC/PBS.
Introduction Interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome (IC/PBS) is a debilitating
chronic disease of unknown etiology characterized by urgency frequency and suprapubic pain
at full bladder. Current treatments are usually unsuccessful in completely eradicating
bladder pain and increasing bladder capacity. Intravesical resiniferatoxin once was
considered to be effective but this has not been shown in a large scale multiple center
trial. Several oral medication such as pentosanpolysulphate (PPS), amitryptynine,
cyclosporin have been tried but the therapeutic efficacy have been proven ineffective.
Intravesical treatment with heparin, hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulphate, bacillus
Calmette-Guerin, dimethylsulphoxide, resiniferatoxin, or botulinum toxin A has been shown
early effectiveness in some patients. However, the placebo effect should be weighed and
randomized, double-blind trials should be undertaken to demonstrate the actual therapeutic
effects of these therapeutic modalities.
Although botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) has been widely reported in its efficacy in the
treatment of neurogenic and idiopathic detrusor overactivity (DO) with satisfactory results,
there have only been few studies using BoNT-A in treatment of IC/PBS. In recent basic
researches, BoNT-A has been shown to inhibit not only the release of acetylcholine and
norepinephrine, but also that of nerve growth factor, adenosine triphosphate, substance P
and calcitonin gene-related peptide from the nerve fibers and urothelium. In clinical
experiments, BoNT-A has been shown to reduce DO, impaired bladder sensation, and decrease
visceral pain in chronic inflammatory diseases. These results suggest that BoNT-A treatment
can modulate sensory transmission as well as reduce detrusor contractility. Although BoNT-A
injection seems promising in treating symptoms of IC/PBS, long term results did not provide
successful outcome. The limited successful result is possibly due to inadequate distribution
of BoNT-A delivered to the bladder wall, inadequate dose of toxin, or lacking of some
promoting factors to enhance the therapeutic effect of BoNT-A. Repeated intravesical BoNT-A
injections was recently performed in refractory IC/PBS and the therapeutic effects seems
promising. About 70% of the patients with non-ulcer type IC/PBS may benefit from repeated
BoNT-A injections every 6 months. Immunohistochemistry study also confirmed the reduction of
inflammatory biomarkers and pro-apoptotic proteins such as Bax and Bad expressions after
repeated BoNT-A injections.
Concerning the injection sites of BoNT-A for IC/BPS bladders, there is no consensus.
Suburothelial injection and Trigonal injection have all been used in treatment of IC/BPS and
the short-term and long-term results are equivalent. It is unmet to clarify which injection
method is superior in clinical efficacy and patient safety. This study was designed in a
randomized, double-blind trial to test the therapeutic effects and adverse events between
intravesical BoNTA injection into suburothelium and trigone. The results of this study might
provide clinical evidence for a better therapeutic regimen of BoNT-A in the treatment of
IC/PBS.
Materials and Methods
A total of 60 patients with IC/PBS who have failed previous treatments for at least 6 months
will be enrolled in this study. A diagnosis of IC/PBS has been established based on
characteristic symptoms and cystoscopic findings of glomerulations, petechia, or mucosal
fissures after hydrodistention. All patients have been treated with at least two types of
treatment modalities including non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs, oral PPS, intravesical
instillation of heparin, hyaluronic acid, or tricyclic antidepressant for at least 6 months
but the symptoms remained unchanged or relapsed. They will be investigated thoroughly on
enrollment and will be excluded if not meeting the inclusion criteria of NIDDK. However, in
this study the patients with Hunner's ulcer will not be included because previous study has
shown that ulcer type IC/BPS does not respond to intravesical BoNT-A injection.
Patients will be requested to keep a 3-day voiding diary prior to treatment to record the
functional bladder capacity (FBC) and the number of urinary frequency and nocturnal. The IC
symptoms will be assessed by the O'Leary-Sant symptom and problem indexes. The pain score
will be reported by patient self-assessment using a 10-point visual analog scale (VAS)
system. Videourodynamic study and potassium chloride (KCl) sensitivity test will be
routinely performed and patients will be informed of the possible complications associated
with BoNT-A injection such as generalized muscle weakness, difficult urination, transient
urinary retention, or urinary tract infections.
Videourodynamic study will be performed by standard procedures using a 6 Fr dual channel
catheter and an 8 Fr rectal balloon catheter. Cystometric study will be performed with
normal saline at a filling rate of 20 ml/min. All descriptions and terminology in this
report are in accordance with the recommendations of the International Continence Society.
After the videourodynamic study, 40ml KCl solution of 0.4M will be infused slowly into the
bladder and the test will be regarded as positive when painful (of ≧2 VAS score) or urgency
sensation (urgency severity score increased by ≧1) is elicited compared to normal saline
infusion during urodynamic study.
This study will be performed in Hualien Tzu chi General.The study should be approved by the
Institutional Review Board (IRB) and ethics committee of the university and will be
registered in ClinicalTrial.gov. Each patient will be informed about the study rationale and
procedures, and written, informed consent will be obtained before treatment.
Eligible patients will be admitted for the treatment. They will be randomly assigned to
receive intravesical injection of 100U of BoNT-A (BOTOX, Allergan, Irvine, CA, USA) into the
trigone (the treatment group) or suburothelium (the comparative group) immediately followed
by cystoscopic hydrodistention under intravenous general anesthesia in the operation room.
Blood (10ml) and urine samples (30ml) will be collected before intravesical injection and
after bladder hydrodistention. Bladder wall biopsies will also be performed after
hydrodistention. The patients will be allocated to treatment or control group by the
permuted block randomization code which is centrally controlled by a clinical pharmacist who
prepares the solution for injection. The intravesical injection was performed by a urology
attending doctor without recording the injection mode in the medical chart. The principle
investigator, patients, and study nurse did not know the injection mode to the patients'
bladder to keep the study in a double-blind condition.
Each vial of BoNT-A will be diluted with 10 ml of normal saline, resulting in 10U BoNT-A per
1.0 ml. Patients assigned for suburothelial BoNT-A injections received 20 injections in the
bladder body whereas those assigned trigonal injections will receive 10 sites injections at
the trigonal area (5 injections behind interureteric ridge and 5 inside the trigone). The
injection needle will be inserted about 1mm into the urothelium at the bladder wall, using a
23 gauge needle and rigid cystoscopic injection instrument (22 Fr, Richard Wolf, and
Knittlingen, Germany). Cystoscopic hydrodistention will be performed to an intravesical
pressure of 80 cm water for 15 minutes and the maximal bladder capacity (MBC) under
hydrodistention will be recorded. Bladder biopsies will be taken at the four sites about 2cm
lateral and posterior to the ureteral orifice after hydrodistention.
After the BoNT-A injections, a 14 Fr urethral Foley catheter will be indwelled for one night
and patients will be discharged on the next day. Oral antibiotics will be prescribed for 7
days. Patients will be followed up in the outpatient clinic 2 weeks and 4 weeks later. Then
the patients will be followed up at out-patient clinic at 2 weeks, 4 weeks and 8 weeks.
Data from the 3-day voiding diary and symptom inventory using the O'Leary-Sant symptom
score, as well as information on FBC, daily urinary frequency, nocturia, and pain VAS will
be recorded at baseline, 2 weeks, 4 weeks, and 8 weeks. The largest voided volume in the
3-day voiding diary will be considered as a measure of FBC. At 8-week follow-up after the
intravesical injection patients will be questioned of the current bladder condition and a
urodynamics study with KCl test will be performed.
The urodynamic study will be performed at baseline and 12 weeks after intravesical
treatment. The urodynamic parameters include first sensation of bladder filling (FSF), urge
sensation (US), cystometric bladder capacity (CBC), detrusor pressure (Pdet), maximum flow
rate (Qmax) during voiding and postvoid residual (PVR). KCl test will also be performed.
The primary end-point of this study is the reduction of bladder pain at 8-week follow-up. If
patient has a reduction of VAS pain score of 2 or more, they will be considered as
successfully treated. The treatment outcome will also be assessed by the global response
assessment (GRA) to evaluate the overall perception of treatment result. The result will be
considered as excellent when patients report improvement in the GRA by >2 or patients become
free of bladder pain (VAS=0). The outcome will be considered improved if there is
improvement in the GRA by =1. Patients with excellent and improved results will be
considered as having subjectively successful result.
The results of voiding diary, urodynamic study, IC symptom score and pain VAS will be
compared between baseline and 8-week end-point. Long-term successful results will be
assessed by self-reported improved GRA and pain VAS at 6 months and further. Data will be
compared between treatment and placebo groups. A p-value of less than 0.05 will be
considered statistically significant.
If patients still feel bladder pain and unsuccessful results at the end-point, repeated
BoNT-A injection will be given at 3 months in the same procedure. At the same time, bladder
biopsy, urine and blood samples will also be collected for further study. . If patient does
not want to receive repeat BoNT-A injection, intravesical hyaluronic acid instillations will
be proceeded.
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