Vulvodynia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Double Blind Placebo-controlled RCT of the Efficacy and Safety of Intramuscular Injections of Botulinum Toxin A as a Treatment for Provoked Vestibulodynia
Women with provoked vestibulodynia (PVD) suffer from severe dyspareuni and often present a
hyperactivity of the pelvic floor muscles (PFM) which maintain the dyspareunia. The rationale
for the study is that for women with PVD who don't succeed to restore the function of the PFM
by physiotherapy, Botulinum Toxin A (BTA) could be an optional treatment by decreasing the
high muscle tonus and thus possibly reduce the coital pain.
Objectives and outcome Women with PVD will be recruited for a double blind RCT of 2 injection
of 50 Allergan-units BTA (3 months apart) or placebo in the bulbocavernous muscles (situated
adjacent to the lower part of the vagina).
Primary outcome: The reduction of patient self-reported dyspareunia measured by VAS 0 (no
pain) to 100 (worst pain imaginable).
Secondary outcome: Pain at tampon insertion measured by VAS 0-100, functional measurement of
dyspareunia (see below), the reduction of pelvic floor hyperactivity/tonus, measured with a
vaginal manometer, safety aspects and effect duration of BTA, influence on quality of life
and psychosexual evaluation.
Rationale Dyspareunia is a common pain problem among women. The prevalence has been estimated
to be 10-15%. The most common type of dyspareunia among premenopausal women is provoked
vestibulodynia (PVD). PVD is characterized by pain upon touch, pressure and stretch of the
vestibular tissue in spite of the absence of other gynecological or dermatological disease
[4]. The pain and its associated sexual consequences have a severe negative impact on the
quality of life of affected women. Currently the etiology, although still not completely
clarified, is considered to be multi-factorial involving biomedical and psychosexual causes.
Two sub-categories of PVD has been identified; primary PVD, where pain occurs at the first
attempt of vaginal entry (intercourse or tampon use) and secondary PVD, where pain occurs
after a period of normal functioning. There is evidence of patho-physiological changes in
three interdependent systems; the vestibular tissue, the pelvic floor muscles and the pain
regulatory pathways of the central nervous system. Signs of a neurogenic inflammation in the
vestibular mucosa, with neural hyperplasia of CGRP and Substance P positive C-fibers have
been found. Furthermore, recent evidence supports the importance of a pelvic floor muscle
(PFM) dysfunction to the etiology of PVD. Women with PVD have been shown to have elevated
resting activity, lower maximal strength and poorer control of the PFM compared to healthy
controls. Evidence suggests that this hyperactivity, although possibly originating as a
protective defense mechanism provoked by pain, is chronic and thus contributes to maintaining
and exacerbating the neurogenic inflammation and pain. A circular model has been suggested in
which pain during intercourse and fear of pain may decrease sexual arousal and increase PFM
tonus, whereby the PFM hyperactivity might act as an initiator of vestibular sensory changes
and inflammation. However there is a lack of longitudinal studies to answer the question
whether the PFM dysfunction is antecedent to the pain or a result of the pain.
Gentilcore-Saulnier et al. proposed that superficial and deep layers of the PFM may differ in
their involvement in PVD as assessed with EMG external surface electrodes and an intravaginal
probe, respectively. They found that women with PVD have significantly higher resting
activity in the superficial muscle (bulbocaverneous) in comparison with controls. The
difference was not significant for the deep layer (puborectalis, pubococcygeus, ileococcygeus
and ischiococcygeus muscles).
The treatment guidelines today recommend a multi-modal treatment including topical anesthetic
agents, cognitive behavioral therapy and PFM rehabilitation based on physiotherapy. As a
second line treatment injections with botulinum toxin A (BTA) in the bulbocavernous muscles
bilaterally has been suggested and to a limited extent tested. The main target for BTA is a
transient paretic effect on skeletal muscular fibers and it also blocks the release of
neuropeptides and neurotransmitters involved in the neuropathic pain and could therefore have
additional effect in the treatment of PVD. Previously published reports on the effects of BTA
for PVD are few and the methods of injection (different injection sites, use or non-use of an
EMG needle for direction of injection sites) and doses used (20, 35, 100 IU) differ as well
as methods of measuring treatment outcome. Only one double blind RCT has been published so
far where no additional effect of BTA compared to saline could be detected, however the BTA
dose used was low (20 IU) and only one treatment was performed. Using BTA in the PFM seems to
be safe and only tenderness at the injection site and mild influenza like symptoms have been
reported side effects so far.
Hypothesis Our hypothesis is that two treatments (three months apart) of injections with 50
Allergan-units of BTA in the bulbocavernosus muscles in women with PVD will reduce the
hyperactivity in the PFM and thus significantly decrease the pain during intercourse.
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