Dysfunctional Voiding Clinical Trial
Official title:
Botulinum Toxin Urethral Sphincter Injection for Dysfunctional Voiding - A Multicenter Study, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control
This study is designed and aimed at determine the clinical efficacy of BoNT-A on patients with dysfunctional voiding. The results of this study can provide further information for patient selection and therapeutic duration.
This study is designed in a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled, multicentric
trial. A total of 60 patients will be enrolled. All patients have suffered from
dysfunctional voiding that is refractory to conventional treatment. The enrolled patients
should have severe dysuria or urinary retention, large residual urine and have been treated
with medication or other therapeutic modality for over 3 months. The patients will be
randomly assigned to allocate in the treatment and control groups in a 2:1 ratio. About 40
and 20 patients will be enrolled in the treatment and control group, respectively.
This study should be approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) and ethical committee
of the hospital. Every patient should be thoroughly informed and written informed consent
should be obtained before treatment.
Patients will receive a complete urological work-up before treatment, including urinalysis,
urine culture, cystoscopy to prove no anatomical stricture or lower urinary tract pathology,
and videourodynamic study. All medication that may affect the lower urinary tract function
will be stopped at least 1 week before Botulinum Toxin A (BoNT-A) injection.
Videourodynamic study will be performed with the patient in supine position if patients
cannot stand up or sit on the commode. A 6 Fr dual channel urethral pressure profiles (UPP)
urethral catheter will be inserted to the urinary bladder. After evacuation of the residual
urine, urethral pressure profilometry will be performed first. Then the bladder will be
filled with normal saline containing 20% urografin at the filling rate of 30 ml/min. The
filling and voiding cystourethrography will be investigated by a C-arm positioned below the
patient. Uroflowmetry is recorded by a weighed transducer placed below the examination
table. After the bladder is filled to the capacity, the patients are asked to urinate per
urethrae. If patient cannot urinate per urethrae with the urethral catheter in situ,
suprapubic puncture with a 18 Gauge needle and a 3-Fr epidural catheter will be undertaken
and patients will urinate without the catheter in the urethra. The patients are requested to
stand up and urinate into the commode. Pressure flow study and concomitant voiding
cystourethrography are performed.
The urodynamic parameters include maximal urethral closure pressure (MUCP), functional
profile length (FPL), cystometric bladder capacity (CBC), bladder compliance, voiding
detrusor pressure (Pdet), maximal flow rate (Qmax), voided volume, and postvoid residual
urine volume (PVR). In the patients who have detrusor underactivity, the abdominal pressure
to urinate and the detrusor leak point pressure will be measured. Images of voiding
cystourethrography will be emphasized on the bladder neck opening, urethral sphincter
relaxation, and dilatation of posterior urethra during voiding.
Patients will be admitted and BoNT-A (treatment group) or normal saline (control group)
injections will be performed in the operation room where complete cardiovascular monitoring
is available during the operation. BoNT-A injections are made under cystoscopy guide in male
patients and injecting periurethrally in female patients. The BoNT-A will be purchased from
Allergan Company (Botox, 100 units/vial, Irvine, California, U.S.A.). Each vial of BoNT-A
will be diluted to 5 ml by normal saline. A total of 100 units of BoNT-A will be injected
deeply into the external sphincter at the 3, 6, 9 and 12 o'clock positions in approximate
equal aliquot. After BoNT-A injections, a 14 Fr Foley catheter will be indwelled routinely
for 1 day and then removed. Patients will be followed up for their voiding conditions. When
dysuria persists, intermittent catheterization will be advised instead of indwelling Foley
catheter. Antibiotics will not be necessary unless urinary tract infection occurs, and
medications to reduce urethral sphincteric resistance are discontinued.
Patients will be closely contacted and monitored by the research assistant by telephone.
They will be followed up at out-patient clinic at 1 week, 2 weeks and 4 weeks after BoNT-A
injections. After the first month after initial BoNT-A injection, patients will be followed
up monthly until the therapeutic effect is gone. Videourodynamic study and UPP study will be
performed at 4 weeks after BoNT-A injections. The subjective improvement of voiding
condition will be assessed by the obstructive symptom scores (including hesitancy,
intermittency, dysuria, small caliber of urine) and quality of life score which are adopted
from the International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) system.
The primary end-point is the change of Patient Perception of Bladder Condition (PPBC) at 4
weeks after the initial injection. If patients have a PPBC improved by two scales, they are
considered as successfully treated, otherwise failed treatment. The subjective symptom
score, quality of life score and urodynamic parameters will be compared at baseline and 4
weeks after BoNT-A injection within and between the treatment group and control groups. For
the patients who do not have significant improvement 4 weeks after BoNT-A injections, a
second injection with 100 units of BoNT-A will be performed at 4 weeks after the initial
injection regardless the patient's initial grouping. These patients will be followed up at
the same interval until the return of voiding dysfunction.
Continuous variables are presented as means ± standard deviations (SDs), and categorical
data are presented as numbers and percentages (%). Statistical comparisons within group will
be performed by paired t test, between the groups are tested using the chi-square test for
categorical variables, and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test for continuous variables. Long-term
successful results are compared using Kaplan-Meier analyses. Statistical assessments are
considered significant when p < 0.05. Statistical analyses will be performed using SPSS 15.0
statistical software (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).
Any side effect related to the BoNT-A injections will be asked to report. There has not been
reported to have serious side effect from local injection of BoNT-A to the urethral
sphincter. However, the potential side effects, such as exacerbation of urinary
incontinence, allergy and anaphylactic shock should be informed to the patients and
carefully monitor the postoperative conditions. Urinalysis will be checked at the first
follow-up 1 and 2 week after BoNT-A injection. Antibiotics will be given if patients have
significant urinary tract infection.
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