Urinary Incontinence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Open-Label Safety And Dose Conversion/Determination Study of OROS® Oxybutynin Chloride for Urge Urinary Incontinence
The purpose of this study is to is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of OROS® oxybutynin chloride in patients being treated for urge urinary incontinence. Oxybutynin is an antispasmodic, anticholinergic medication for the treatment of the symptoms of overactive bladder.
Urinary incontinence refers to the involuntary loss of urine in sufficient amounts to be
considered a social or health problem. It is under-reported and under-treated as patients
are often ashamed and embarrassed to discuss their condition and clinicians may also fail to
ask patients about incontinence. This is a multi-center, open-label study including dose
conversion and dose determination to evaluate the safety of OROS® oxybutynin chloride at a
clinically acceptable dose. There are three study periods: Run-in, Dose
Conversion/Determination, and Maintenance. During the 1-week Run-in Period, baseline
incontinence, urinary frequency, and health related quality-of-life data are collected.
During the Dose Conversion/Determination Period, any previous urge urinary incontinence
medications are discontinued and each patient is started on OROS® oxybutynin chloride. The
dose is titrated to a clinically acceptable dose in 5-mg increments at 7 ± 3 day intervals
to a possible maximum dose of 30 mg/day. The clinically acceptable dose is defined as either
the minimum effective dose (i.e., the dose at which the patient has no incontinent episodes
for the last 2 days of the dosing interval) or the dose providing the best balance between
symptomatic improvement and side effects. Patients taking immediate-release oxybutynin at
enrollment started dose titration on OROS® oxybutynin chloride at a dose equal to their
immediate-release oxybutynin dose; all others started at 5 mg per day OROS® (oxybutynin
chloride). After the clinically acceptable dose is established, the patient continues for an
additional week at that dose to confirm that it is appropriate. Then the patient enters the
12-week Maintenance Period that evaluates whether the urge urinary incontinence reduction
that is achieved by the beginning of maintenance has persisted. The primary outcome of the
study is an evaluation of the safety of OROS® oxybutynin chloride. Safety assessments
include the incidence of adverse events, physical examination and medical history, clinical
laboratory tests, urinalysis, electrocardiograms (ECGs), vital signs, and the Physician's
Anticholinergic Effects Assessment (P-ACEA), an assessment completed by the physician if
severe or intolerable anticholinergic effects occur.
OROS® oxybutynin chloride (5 mg and 10 mg systems): One to five systems taken orally per day
(5 mg per day to a maximum of 30 mg per day) as a single morning dose. The duration of the
Maintenance Period of the study is 12 weeks.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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