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Clinical Trials/NCT05997043
NCT05997043
Recruiting
Early Phase 1

Safety and Efficacy of Botulinum Toxin A for Treatment of Overactive Bladder in Parkinson's Disease:Randomized Controlled Trial

Zhujiang Hospital1 site in 1 country60 target enrollmentAugust 26, 2023

Overview

Phase
Early Phase 1
Intervention
oral anti-Parkinson drugs and injection of botulinum toxin
Conditions
Parkinson's Disease
Sponsor
Zhujiang Hospital
Enrollment
60
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Symptom score of overactive bladder
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
2 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

A randomized controlled trial is to be conducted to confirm the efficacy and safety of intramuscular injection of botulinum toxin in the treatment of Parkinson's bladder overactivity.

Detailed Description

Overactive bladder is defined by the International Continence Society as a syndrome characterized by symptoms of urinary urgency, often accompanied by frequency and nocturia, with or without urge incontinence, but without urinary tract infection or other definite symptoms pathological changes. Bladder dysfunction is one of the most common autonomic nervous disorders in Parkinson's disease (PD). Up to 70% of PD patients have bladder hyperactivity. Nocturia is the most commonly reported symptom , followed by urinary frequency, urinary urgency and urge incontinence, affecting patients' quality of life and social life. At present, intramuscular injection of 100U botulinum toxin (BoNT-A) is a reasonable choice for the treatment of bladder overactivity in PD, and it has been proved to be a safe and effective method for the treatment of neurogenic detrusor overactivity, especially for patients with insufficient response to anticholinergic drugs,which is a Grade Ia recommendation in the EAU guidelines. There are some problems in the current research as follows: 1. Single-arm study, non-randomized control, and small sample size; 2. Only patients with urinary incontinence but not patients with dry bladder overactivity were included; 3. Patients with urinary retention are not excluded, resulting in urinary retention after injection of botulinum toxin, affecting the experience of patients; 4. Botulinum toxin dose injection varies, there is still a lack of large-scale prospective clinical studies to reflect the relationship between botulinum toxin dose and residual urine volume; 5. The urodynamic index was used in the outcome index, which could not reflect the improvement of symptoms sensitively and objectively. In order to make up for the shortcomings of previous studies, a randomized controlled trial is planned to confirm the efficacy and safety of intramuscular injection of low dose botulinum toxin in the treatment of PD bladder overactivity

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
August 26, 2023
End Date
July 1, 2026
Last Updated
2 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Zhujiang Hospital
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Shuzhen Zhu

Deputy Chief Physician

Zhujiang Hospital

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease were diagnosed by experienced neurologists based on the diagnostic criteria of the International Motor Disorder Association.
  • PD patients with overactive bladder were observed by voiding diary for 3 days and evaluated by OABSS score.
  • Eligible males and females, aged between 25 and
  • The patient was treated with dopaminergic drugs, and if there was an wearing-off phenomenon, it was evaluated during the turning-off period or without taking the drug (when the patient developed one of the symptoms in WOQ-19 \[13\] and the symptom improved after the next medication, it suggested that there was an end-of-dose phenomenon).
  • With a history of NDO ≥ 3 months, the symptoms of bladder overactivity were not fully controlled by anticholinergic drugs, which was defined as insufficient response after 4 weeks of treatment or unbearable side effects after 2 weeks of optimized dose treatment.
  • patients who took anticholinergic drugs at baseline must maintain a stable dose throughout the study, while those who did not take anticholinergic drugs could not take them during the study period.
  • if necessary, the patient must be willing to initiate intermittent catheterization (CIC).
  • the informed consent of the subject or his guardian has been obtained, and the informed consent of the clinical trial has been signed voluntarily.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Ultrasonography showed that the residual urine of bladder was larger than 10ml. 2) Patients with glaucoma and myasthenia gravis are not suitable for botulinum toxin.
  • Indwelling catheter or intermittent catheterization (CIC) is needed to empty the bladder.
  • Patients have been treated with botulinum toxin for any urinary disease. 5) People who are known to be allergic or allergic to drugs and their ingredients 6) Take drugs that interfere with neuromuscular transmission. 7) Receiving anticoagulant therapy. 8) There is infection at the injection site. 9)With dementia, Parkinson's dementia scale ≤ 73.5 at screening time \[15\] or with Parkinson's disease psychiatric disorder

Arms & Interventions

Experimental group

Experimental group

Intervention: oral anti-Parkinson drugs and injection of botulinum toxin

Control group

Control group

Intervention: oral anti-Parkinson's drugs

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Symptom score of overactive bladder

Time Frame: 2 weeks,1month,2 month, 3 month

The purpose of this questionnaire is to assess the severity of symptoms in patients with overactive bladder. Based on the OABSS scale, when the score of question 3 (urgency) is more than 2 points, and the whole OABSS score is more than 3 points, it can be diagnosed as OAB

Secondary Outcomes

  • urinary symptoms(2 weeks,1month,2 month, 3 month)
  • urodynamics(2 weeks,1month,2 month, 3 month)
  • King health score(2 weeks,1month,2 month, 3 month)
  • Urgency severity scale(2 weeks,1month,2 month, 3 month)

Study Sites (1)

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