Comparison of Air Charged Catheters With Water Filled Catheters for Urodynamic Study
- Conditions
- Incontinence
- Interventions
- Procedure: lower urinary tract dysfunction
- Registration Number
- NCT02030340
- Lead Sponsor
- UMC Utrecht
- Brief Summary
Various systems to measure intravesical and intrarectal pressure during urodynamic testing; especially cystometry, exist. Water filled tube -systems are the most commonly used and should be regarded as the contemporary standard. A water filled system is however sensitive to tube and or patient movement artefacts and prone to erroneous calibration. Air charged catheters are less sensitive to patient and especially tubing- movements, and calibrate easier. However, in vitro tests have demonstrated that air charged catheters respond somewhat slower and relatively damped, especially to rapid pressure changes as in (simulated) coughing, in comparison with water filled systems. The clinical relevance of these observations is unknown.
This is a study to compare the technical reliability and clinical applicability of the two types of catheter systems for cystometry in a synchronous double catheter testing procedure in a prospective group or patients scheduled for urodynamic investigation.
- Detailed Description
Study design: Patient cohort, acute experiment, mono -center synchronous double urodynamic catheter technique study.
Study population: Adult female patients and male or female patients with spinal cord injury or meningomyelocele unable to void, scheduled for urodynamic investigation on the basis of contemporary standards and guidelines, because of signs and or symptoms of lower urinary tract dysfunction.
Intervention: Synchronous double catheter urodynamic testing; Standard filling cystometry with both air-charged ánd water filled catheter pairwise inserted, and connected to the registry equipment.
Main study parameters/endpoints: Difference of intravesical pressure increment maximum during filling cystometry between the two systems.
Primary hypothesis to test: The average difference as well as the average absolute difference of maximum water pressure (standard system) and maximum air pressure (comparator) are both 0 (zero).
There is no per-protocol for follow up of the patients.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 36
(All necessary:)
- Female gt18 years
- Scheduled for urodynamic investigation on the basis of contemporary standards and guidelines, because of signs and symptoms of lower urinary tract dysfunction.
- May perform (not excluded) intermittent (self) catheterisation.
- No signs of voiding dysfunction (routine outpatient max flow above 20 millilitre per second without postvoid residual)
- No signs of bladder /pelvic pain syndrome
OR:
(All necessary)
- Male or female gt18years
- Complete spinal cord injury, level above T12, or meningomyelocele unable to void and significantly reduced or no pelvic floor, urethral or bladder sensation.
- May have (not excluded) 'sacral sparing'; some residual anal sensation
- Scheduled for urodynamic investigation on the basis of contemporary standards and guidelines, because of signs and symptoms of lower urinary tract dysfunction or because of routine (protocol, guidelines) follow -up.
- Usually: performing intermittent (self) catheterisation); not excluded.
- May have (not excluded) indwelling catheter.
- Unwilling or unfit to sign informed consent.
- American Society of Anesthesiologists -score gt2; karnovsky lt80percent.
- Male with normal lower urinary tract sensation.
- Women with signs of voiding dysfunction.
- Patients included in scientific studies (for other reasons).
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Testing Lower urinary tract dysfunction lower urinary tract dysfunction All patients with lower urinary tract dysfunction where urodynamic diagnosis is required according to standards and (international) practice guidelines will have a synchronous double system (combination of air-charged and water filled) urodynamic test.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The difference between the water filled catheter recorded and simultaneously air charged catheter recorded maximum pressure (amplitude)during the bladder filling phase of urodynamic test. acute comparison during one test with two types of catheter Null hypothesis: the (absolute mean) difference between the water filled catheter recorded and simultaneously air charged catheter recorded maximum pressure (amplitude) observed with a dominant detrusor pressure event during urodynamic filling as obtained with both systems is close to zero.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method responses to relevant pressure events: end fill pressure, maximum contraction pressure, maximum pressure at overactive detrusor contraction and maximum cough pressure. acute comparison during one test with two types of catheter to test the clinical feasibility (-mean absolute- pressure responses differences) of the air charged system, against the contemporary clinical standard. Perfect feasibility of air charged catheter system is achieved when the measured pressures are equal (difference zero) to the water filled system in all performed measurements in all situations.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University Medical Center Utrecht
🇳🇱Utrecht, Netherlands