Interstitial Cystitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Intravesical Botulinum Toxin A Injection in Treatment of Interstitial Cystitis Refractory to Conventional Treatment - A Prospective, Multicenter, Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Clinical Trial
This study was designed in a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial to test the actual therapeutic effects of intravesical BoNTA injection. The results of this study might provide clinical evidence for a better therapeutic regimen in the treatment of IC/PBS.
Background: Interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome (IC/PBS) is a debilitating
chronic disease of unknown etiology. Current treatments are usually unsuccessful in
completely eradicating bladder pain and increasing bladder capacity. Although investigations
on this topic have been enthusiastically performed, the etiology of IC/PBS remains unknown.
Treatment based on single pathophysiology such as urothelial damage or neurogenic
inflammation might not enough to eradicate the cascade of pathologies of IC/PBS.
Inhibition of neuroplasticity of the sensory fibers in the suburothelial space by
intravesical BoNT-A injections might have good therapeutic targeting on pain and sensory
urgency in patients with 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. This study was designed in a multicenter, randomized,
double-blind, placebo controlled trial to test the actual therapeutic effects of
intravesical BoNT-A injection on IC/PBS. The results of this study might provide clinical
evidence for a better therapeutic regimen in the treatment of IC/PBS.
Materials and Methods: A total of 90 patients with IC/PBS who have failed conventional
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. They will be
investigated thoroughly on enrollment and will be excluded if not meeting the inclusion
criteria of National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK).
However, in this study the patients with Hunner's ulcer will not be included because
previous study has shown that ulcer type IC/PBS does not respond to intravesical BoNT-A
injection.
A 3-day voiding diary for functional bladder capacity, urinary frequency and nocturnal,
O'Leary-Sant symptom and problem indexes, visual analog score (VAS), and videourodynamic
parameters and potassium chloride (KCl) sensitivity test will be used to assess the
therapeutic efficacy. 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. Eligible patients will be randomly assigned
to receive intravesical injection of 100U of BoNT-A (BOTOX, Allergan, Irvine, CA, USA) (the
treatment group) or injection with normal saline (control group). The intravesical injection
will be performed 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 in 2:1 ratio, which is centrally controlled by a clinical
pharmacist who prepares the solution for injection. Each vial of BoNT-A will be diluted with
10 ml of normal saline, resulting in 10U BoNT-A per 1.0 ml. Patients receive 20
suburothelial injections of BoNT-A solution or normal saline, each injection site receives
5U or saline in 0.5 ml. After the BoNT-A injections, 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 12 weeks. The primary end-point of this study is
the reduction of bladder pain at 12-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). Data
will be compared between treatment and placebo groups. A p-value of less than 0.05 will be
considered statistically significant.
Cystoscopy and bladder biopsy will be performed and sent for pathological examination and
urological laboratory for investigations. The urine and serum biomarkers (NGF) and
urothelial dysfunction markers (TUNEL for apoptosis, Ki-67 for proliferation, tryptase
staining for mast cell activity, E-cadherin and zonula occludens-1 for junction protein
expression) will be assessed to investigate the severity of urothelial dysfunction and
chronic inflammation presented in these diseased bladders. Furthermore, the inflammatory
protein assay such as TNFα, IL-6, IL-8 or TGF-beta will also be measured by protein array
and western blotting. The urine and blood samples will be collected at baseline, 4 weeks,
and end-point (12 weeks) in both treatment and controlled patients. The changes of urine and
serum nerve growth factor (NGF) and cytokines (such as IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-alpha)
will be compared within group and between groups to provide laboratory evidence of decrease
of bladder inflammation in IC/PBS. The changes of NGF and cytokines levels after BoNT-A
injection treatments will also be compared in patients who respond and not respond to the
treatment given. Urinary and serum NGF and cytokines levels were measured by the ELISA
method.
Expected Results: The results of this study may demonstrate that intravesical injection of
BoNT-A has a better clinical effect to provide greater pain relief and increase bladder
capacity in patients with IC/PBS compared to the patients who received saline injection
treatment. The clinical effect of BoNT-A on IC/PBS might be further reflected by the
reduction of the serum or urinary NGF and cytokines levels.
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