Use of a Diurnal Indwelling Urethral Catheter to Improve Quality of Life
NCT ID: NCT03573726
Last Updated: 2018-06-29
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
14 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-09-11
2016-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The option that the investigators propose is novel and is the use of an indwelling urethral catheter placed in the morning, remaining in place for 8 hours ('diurnal' indwelling catheter). Bladder drainage will occur on a scheduled basis during the school day or workday by the simple opening of the closed catheter. After eight hours, each evening, the indwelling catheter will be removed with resumption of CIC. This would be a convenient and practical solution that could simultaneously avoid many of the risks associated with long-term indwelling urethral catheter use, while still allowing for the improved independence, convenience and privacy desired by youth with spina bifida or spinal cord injury.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
OTHER
NONE
Study Groups
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Technically N/A, Crossover Design
Each participant underwent an evaluation during standard of care CIC use vs evaluations during use of the study intervention (CDIC).
Closed diurnal indwelling catheter (CDIC)
Each participant underwent an evaluation during standard of care CIC use vs evaluations during use of the study intervention (CDIC).
Interventions
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Closed diurnal indwelling catheter (CDIC)
Each participant underwent an evaluation during standard of care CIC use vs evaluations during use of the study intervention (CDIC).
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Primary diagnosis of Spina Bifida or Spinal Cord Injury with neurogenic bladder and established patients of a pediatric urologist in the Shriners Hospitals for Children multidisciplinary spina bifida clinic.
3. History of compliance with a CIC regimen.
4. Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document on the part of both the subject and guardian. A signed assent will be required, on the part of the subject, for all youth aged 10 to 17 years at the onset of study participation. In these cases, a parent or legal guardian must additionally sign a provision of informed consent. For subjects 18 years of age and older at the onset of study participation, only the subject must sign a provision of informed consent and HIPAA compliant research authorization.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Greater than 2 diagnosed UTIs within last 12 months or symptomatic UTI at trial onset (UTI defined as the presence or ≥104 cfu/ml of a single bacterial strain in the presence of identified symptoms including but not limited to fever, flank or abdominal pain, change in urinary pattern or dysuria). Potential screened subjects with a symptomatic UTI at time of screening may be included after treatment of the UTI, followed by verification of symptom resolution and a negative culture result.
3. History of bladder augmentation
4. History of prior urethral surgery
5. History of urinary tract calculi
6. Diagnosis of high volume vesicoureteral reflux (grade 3 to 5) or moderate to severe (grade 3-4) hydronephrosis on pre-study imaging within 6 months of trial onset.
7. Diagnosis on urodynamics of \>40mmHg detrusor end fill pressure (consistent with a poorly compliant bladder) on pre-study urodynamics within 6 months of trial onset.
8. Diminished renal function (GFR \<60, consistent with CKD III) on pre-study laboratory assessment within 4 weeks prior to study onset.
9. Lack of a 5th grade minimum reading/writing level by the subject (and parent or guardian providing informed consent of \<18 years of age at time of study onset)
10. Demonstrated lack of compliance with follow-up, with \>2 missed urologic appointments in past year and/or lack of compliance with clean intermittent catheterization.
11. Pregnant women (all female participants must have a negative pregnancy test within 4 weeks prior to study onset).
12. Prisoners, institutionalized individuals or wards of the state.
10 Years
21 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Shriners Hospitals for Children
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Eric A Kurzrock
Professor of Urology and Pediatrics
Other Identifiers
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429063
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id