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Less to Hold - A Comparison of Bladder Toxicities (Side Effects) in Patients Undergoing Prostate Radiotherapy Between Patients Treated With Empty Bladder and Those on a Drinking Protocol.

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Prostate Cancer
Radiotherapy Side Effect
Interventions
Behavioral: Full bladder
Behavioral: Empty bladder
Registration Number
NCT03832803
Lead Sponsor
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Brief Summary

Radical radiotherapy to the prostate is conventionally treated with a full bladder with the aim of minimising dose to the bladder and small bowel to prevent significant side effects. Tolerance of the bladder filling protocol varies depending on patients' baseline urinary function. It is not uncommon for some men to have "accidents" during treatment causing understandable distress. This can also extend the treatment time and cause knock on delays in the radiotherapy department.

Several United Kingdom (UK) centres report treating with an empty bladder. The investigators carried out a feasibility study comparing treatment with full bladder to empty bladder to ascertain if the investigators can safely change our protocol to that of an empty bladder.

Detailed Description

50 patients receiving radical radiotherapy to the prostate were randomised using closed envelope technique 1:1 into 2 groups. Group A followed the conventional drinking protocol at our centre (200ml prior to treatment) and group B were treated with an empty bladder. Baseline, end of treatment and 6 week follow up scores were prospectively collected for International prostate Symptom Score(IPSS), Late Effects Normal Tissue Task Force - Subjective, Objective, Management, Analytic (LENT SOMA) bowel toxicity and quality of life questionnaires. The investigators also looked at bowel and bladder Dose Volume Histogram (DVH) to ensure constraints were met.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Male
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • Prostate cancer receiving radical radiotherapy.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Not nodal disease.
  • Not prostate bed radiotherapy.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Full BladderFull bladderConventional drinking protocol - 200ml water prior to treatment.
Empty BladderEmpty bladderEmpty bladder prior to treatment.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in IPSS scoreBaseline to end of treatment (4 weeks or 7 and a half weeks depending on radiotherapy schedule); to 6 week follow up; and to 1 year follow up.

IPSS - The International Prostate Symptom Score is a 7 question scale which assesses urinary toxicity. Each question is scored 0-5 totalling a maximum score of 35. A score of 0-7 correlates to mildly symptomatic; 8-19, moderately symptomatic; 20-35, severely symptomatic.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in LENT SOMA scoreBaseline to end of treatment (4 weeks or 7 and a half weeks depending on radiotherapy schedule); to 6 week follow up; and to 1 year follow up.

LENT SOMA - The Late Effects in Normal Tissues Subjective, Objective, Management and Analytic Scales. This is a questionnaire that assesses individual bowel symptoms asking initially whether or not they occur and then scoring the frequency, the higher the score, the more frequent the event. Each question has it's own range of score which is explained on the questionnaire. The scores will be compared for individual questions and there will not be any combining of scores between questions.

Bowel and bladder DVHAt time of radiotherapy planning scan which happens at baseline, on day of randomisation.

Dose to bowel and bladder is calculated and documented if it meets the optimal or mandatory constraints

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

🇬🇧

Preston, United Kingdom

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