Overactive Bladder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Caffeine Reduction and Anticholinergic Medications for Treatment of Overactive Bladder
The purpose of this study is to assess the effects of caffeine reduction/elimination on urinary symptoms in women with overactive bladders and compare this therapeutic approach to anticholinergic therapy. We hope to show a reduction in symptoms with caffeine reduction and determine how effective caffeine reduction is compared to medication. If caffeine reduction is shown to be beneficial, women may be encouraged to use this strategy before resorting to medications.
Urinary symptoms such as frequency, urgency, nocturia, and incontinence occur in many women.
Overactive bladder (OAB) accounts for forty to seventy percent of urinary incontinence.
These symptoms can be mildly annoying to life altering. Many women wear pads or adult
diapers daily and avoid social situations for fear of embarrassment. It is felt that up to
sixteen percent of the adult population may suffer from these symptoms and many of these
women seek medical help.
Currently, the standard of care for OAB includes some combination of lifestyle modification
counseling, bladder retraining, or anticholinergic medications. It is anticipated that
stimulants such as caffeine irritate the bladder and exacerbate OAB symptoms. There have
been a few studies looking at the effect of caffeine but interventions have varied, and the
results have been mixed.
Perhaps the most common treatment for significant OAB symptoms is the prescription of
anticholinergic medications. We know that these are efficacious in many women but they can
be expensive and have significant side effects4. In fact, many women discontinue their
anticholinergics due to dry mouth, dry eyes, gastrointestinal, and genitourinary effects.
To date there have been no studies comparing caffeine reduction to anticholinergic
medications.
Research Questions
1. Does caffeine reduction decrease OAB symptoms?
2. Does the amount of caffeine consumed relate to symptom severity?
3. If symptoms do improve with caffeine reduction, are women compliant with this
treatment?
4. How does caffeine reduction compare to anticholinergic medication in treating OAB?
Study Goal:Compare caffeine reduction to anticholinergic medication as a treatment for
overactive bladder.
Study Design:Randomized prospective study. Eligible participants will be randomized to
either the anticholinergic arm or the caffeine reduction arm.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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