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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03176901
Other study ID # 00095461
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date February 3, 2017
Est. completion date April 12, 2018

Study information

Verified date February 2019
Source University of Utah
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility of conducting a pilot randomized controlled trial comparing mindfulness-based stress reduction with the health enhancement program on symptoms of urinary urge incontinence in older adult women, and to establish preliminary efficacy of these two approaches on symptoms of urinary urge incontinence.


Description:

The overarching goal of this research is to evaluate potential treatment options for older women with symptoms of urinary urge incontinence, with a specific focus on Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, a promising therapeutic approach in preliminary studies and one increasingly used to treat symptoms associated with brain-visceral interactions. Feasibility and preliminary efficacy will be tested in two randomized study arms: a Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction intervention group and a Health Enhancement Program intervention comparison group.

This research study will explore the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of treating urinary urge incontinence in older adult women with mindfulness-based stress reduction in comparison to the health enhancement program through a randomized controlled pilot study. Feasibility determinants will include both research feasibility (recruitment, retention, treatment fidelity) and intervention feasibility (acceptability, tolerability, treatment adherence). Clinical outcomes to evaluate preliminary intervention efficacy will include severity of urinary urge incontinence symptoms, bother of urinary urge incontinence symptoms, perceived stress, and perceived level of self-efficacy of self-management of urinary urge incontinence symptoms. Preliminary efficacy of the intervention will also be evaluated with the Patient Global Impression of Improvement, a process measure that rates the patient's "response of a condition to a therapy" (Ryan, n.d., p. 1).

This combined pilot feasibility study and randomized controlled trial will evaluate specific factors crucial to the success of a large trial to evaluate the effect of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction on urinary urge incontinence in older adult women. Moore (2011) recommended that the pilot study design parallel the future larger study, particularly when evaluating feasibility in the pilot study. The capacity for hypothesis testing, or establishing causal inference is limited in a pilot study due to insufficient power; however, the information from efficacy testing is vital in informing future larger scale clinical trials. This study will serve as a necessary step for the development of effectiveness trials of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction in treatment of urinary urge incontinence in older adult women by informing and guiding evaluation, implementation, and dissemination.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 25
Est. completion date April 12, 2018
Est. primary completion date April 12, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Female
Age group 55 Years to 105 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

The following eligibility criteria must be met for the potential participant to be considered for enrollment.

- The study is enrolling older adult women, with urinary urge incontinence.

- They cannot be currently treating their urinary urge incontinence with medication as this will confound results.

- Women who have attempted more extreme treatments and are still experiencing urinary urge incontinence will not be considered as potential participants, as it is unlikely that mindfulness-based stress reduction would treat urinary urge incontinence that is refractory to that degree.

- Participants must be English speaking, as the interventions and homework will be delivered in English.

- postmenopausal women

- Urge predominant urinary incontinence, defined as score of = 3 (moderate to severe urinary incontinence) on the Incontinence Severity Index

- Urge predominant urinary incontinence as determined by question 3 on the 3 Incontinence Questions. The 3 Incontinence Questions has been shown to be a quick and accurate way of diagnosing stress, urge or mixed incontinence in most cases

- Has experienced urinary urge incontinence symptoms for at least three months

- Committed to attend 8 weekly sessions and one half day retreat between weeks 6 and 7

- No pharmacologic therapy for urinary urge incontinence within three weeks of enrollment and no plan to initiate such medications during the 8 week active treatment

- If on hormone therapy or vaginal estrogen, plan to remain on it for the duration of the study; if not on it, no plan to initiate

- No previous intradetrusor Botox injection for urinary urge incontinence and no plan to receive it during the intervention

- No previous neurostimulation for urinary urge incontinence and no plan to receive it during the intervention English speaking

- A score of >24 on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment

Exclusion Criteria:

The following exclusions are applied, as they could seriously limit participation or confound participant response to the intervention:

- Predominantly stress, mixed, or other type of incontinence as determined by question 3 on the 3 Incontinence Questions

- Currently taking medications for Alzheimer's disease or other dementias; these medications could interfere with their participation

- Known neurologic disease acknowledged to impact bladder function including Parkinson's disease, spinal cord injury, or stroke affecting urinary control; these diseases provide cause for urinary urge incontinence and as such the participant would be unlikely to benefit from the intervention

- Current symptomatic urinary tract infection that has not resolved prior to the start of intervention

- Current bladder infection that has not resolved prior to the start of intervention

- Use of an assistive device for ambulation (such as a cane, walker, or wheelchair) and feels that difficulties with bladder management are related to the slowed time in visiting the restroom ("Was urinary urge incontinence a problem before you began using the assistive device?")

- Functionally incontinent, in other words, having a mental or physical condition that prevents a person from visiting the restroom in time

- Ever diagnosed with interstitial cystitis

- Self-report of vaginal bulge protruding outside of the vagina

- Past participation in a formal program of mindfulness-based stress reduction

- Substantial, uncorrected hearing loss

- Substantial, uncorrected vision loss

- Limitations that preclude completing study questionnaires or surveys, such as difficulties with reading and writing or a cognitive impairment

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction
This experimental arm presents the actual Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program as developed in the late seventies and early eighties in its original eight week format
Health Enhancement Program
This active comparison arm presents the official Health Enhancement Program in its eight week format as developed by MacCoon in 2009.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Utah

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Number of potential participants contacted number of people who contacted PI during recruitment process, including the place they heard about the study 10 weeks
Primary number of enrolled participants completing the study number of participants who attended at least five of nine classes number of excused absences number of unexcused absences 12 weeks
Primary percentage of course content delivered during intervention weekly interventionist report on what was taught participants perception of course content delivered measured by a checklist of concepts covered in the weekly interventions at study completion 44 weeks
Primary positive or negative coded responses to the question "How did it go today?" data coded from two participants' responses after each class in each arm 8 weeks
Primary number of participants who completed each week's homework practice participants mark on homework practice log and submit weekly 8 weeks
Primary number of participants recruited for enrollment potential participants who were interested in the study 10 weeks
Primary number of potential participants who are eligible to enroll number of people who passed the screening process via calls or emails 10 weeks
Primary consent rate number of participants who are willing to sign consent document at enrollment interview; number who pass the Montreal Cognitive Assessment and are willing to sign consent document 10 weeks
Primary number of participants enrolled number of people who enrolled into the study 10 weeks
Primary number of dropouts due to stated distress from or dislike of either intervention experience (as opposed to someone needing to withdraw due to a family emergency or illness) participant self-report of what made the intervention challenging - why they were unable or unwilling to complete the course 8 weeks
Primary - number of minutes of homework practice each week totaled from daily numbers reported by participant 8 weeks
Secondary change in symptom severity measured by the Incontinence Severity Index 16 weeks, 6 months
Secondary change in symptom bother measured by the Overactive Bladder questionnaire, short form 16 weeks, 6 months
Secondary change in perceived stress measured by the Perceived Stress Scale 16 weeks, 6 months
Secondary change in perceived self-efficacy measured by the Geriatric Self Efficacy Index for Urinary Incontinence 16 weeks, 6 months
Secondary self report of rate and trajectory of change in participant impression of improvement measured by the Patient Global Impression of Improvement 16 weeks, 6 months
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