Ureteral Obstruction Clinical Trial
— TOTEMEOfficial title:
Study of Tolerance and Effectiveness of Ureteral Stents MEMOKATH ® 051 in the Treatment of Chronic Strictures of the Ureter
TOTEME offers to treat certain chronic strictures of the ureter with MEMOKATH 051 to assess
its effectiveness, tolerance and mean durability during a 3 years follow up period.
Patients usually treated with double J stents will be included. The double J stent will be
replaced by a MEMOKATH 051 stent under general anesthesia during a cystoscopy. After this
procedure, the patients will have medical examinations, blood exams, radiography and renal
sonography during 3 years. If a problem of tolerance or effectiveness is diagnosed, the
ureteral stent MEMOKATH 051 will be changed or replaced with a double J stent.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 13 |
Est. completion date | May 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age 18-year-old or superior - Chronic stenosis of the ureter treated by placement of a ureteral endoprosthesis for more than six months; - No possibility for surgical or endoscopic treatment of the ureteral stricture - Free Consent, dated and signed by the patient - Affiliated Subject of a regime of French national health and pensions organization. Exclusion Criteria: - Age under 18 year old - Pregnant or nursing Women - Patient having a life expectancy of less than 1 year - Patient having unique kidney - Patient having severe renal insufficiency (creatinin clearance under 30 ml/min) - Possible surgical or endoscopic treatment of ureteral stricture - Repeated urinary tract stones - Urothelial tumor of the bladder - Retro peritoneal fibrosis in the course of evolution - Complications of double J stents requiring more thanks a lot every 6 months - Against anaesthetic indication - Lithiasic inlay probe Double J with obstruction within 6 months - Persons put under maintenance of justice - Persons in inability to understand the sequence of try |
Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | Department of Urology, University Hospital, Bordeaux | Bordeaux | |
France | Department of Urology, University Hospital, Limoges | Limoges | |
France | Department of Urology, Hospices Civils de Lyon | Lyon | |
France | Department of Urology, University Hospital, Toulouse | Toulouse |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital, Bordeaux |
France,
Al-Kandari AM, Al-Shaiji TF, Shaaban H, Ibrahim HM, Elshebiny YH, Shokeir AA. Effects of proximal and distal ends of double-J ureteral stent position on postprocedural symptoms and quality of life: a randomized clinical trial. J Endourol. 2007 Jul;21(7):698-702. — View Citation
Arya M, Mostafid H, Patel HR, Kellett MJ, Philp T. The self-expanding metallic ureteric stent in the long-term management of benign ureteric strictures. BJU Int. 2001 Sep;88(4):339-42. — View Citation
Hübner WA, Plas EG, Stoller ML. The double-J ureteral stent: in vivo and in vitro flow studies. J Urol. 1992 Aug;148(2 Pt 1):278-80. — View Citation
Kehinde EO, Rotimi VO, Al-Awadi KA, Abdul-Halim H, Boland F, Al-Hunayan A, Pazhoor A. Factors predisposing to urinary tract infection after J ureteral stent insertion. J Urol. 2002 Mar;167(3):1334-7. — View Citation
Klarskov P, Nordling J, Nielsen JB. Experience with Memokath 051 ureteral stent. Scand J Urol Nephrol. 2005;39(2):169-72. — View Citation
Kulkarni R, Bellamy E. Nickel-titanium shape memory alloy Memokath 051 ureteral stent for managing long-term ureteral obstruction: 4-year experience. J Urol. 2001 Nov;166(5):1750-4. — View Citation
Laaksovirta S, Välimaa T, Isotalo T, Törmälä P, Talja M, Tammela TL. Encrustation and strength retention properties of the self-expandable, biodegradable, self-reinforced L-lactide-glycolic acid co-polymer 80:20 spiral urethral stent in vitro. J Urol. 2003 Aug;170(2 Pt 1):468-71. — View Citation
Pariente JL, Conort P. [Biomaterials used in contact with the urinary tract for urine drainage: catheters and ureteric stents]. Prog Urol. 2005 Nov;15(5):897-906. Review. French. — View Citation
Perry MJ, Roodhouse AJ, Gidlow AB, Spicer TG, Ellis BW. Thermo-expandable intraprostatic stents in bladder outlet obstruction: an 8-year study. BJU Int. 2002 Aug;90(3):216-23. — View Citation
Poulsen AL, Schou J, Ovesen H, Nordling J. Memokath: a second generation of intraprostatic spirals. Br J Urol. 1993 Sep;72(3):331-4. — View Citation
Ringel A, Richter S, Shalev M, Nissenkorn I. Late complications of ureteral stents. Eur Urol. 2000 Jul;38(1):41-4. — View Citation
Vaidyanathan S, Soni BM, Oo T, Sett P, Hughes PL, Singh G. Long-term result of Memokath urethral sphincter stent in spinal cord injury patients. BMC Urol. 2002 Nov 11;2:12. Epub 2002 Nov 11. — View Citation
* Note: There are 12 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Average durability of the stent MEMOKATH ® 051 | 3 years | Yes | |
Secondary | Proportion of ureteral stent MEMOKATH ® 051 positioning failure | 3 years | Yes | |
Secondary | Average quality of life of the patients measured by auto-questionary | 3 years | Yes | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients to which the ureteral stent was definitely taken away | 3 years | Yes | |
Secondary | Expense of hospitalizations for replacement of the ureteral stent | 3 years | Yes | |
Secondary | Proportion of replacement of the ureteral stent | 3 years | Yes |
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