View Clinical Trial (Medical Research Study)
Behavioral Therapy to Treat Urinary Incontinence in Parkinson's Disease - NCT00866710-30033(Clinical Trial 279725)
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Atlanta |
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State:
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GA |
| Zip Code: |
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30033 |
| Conditions: |
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Urinary Incontinence - Parkinson's Disease |
| Purpose: |
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Background: Parkinson's disease affects up to 3% of persons over the age of 65. Lower
urinary tract symptoms are a frequent cause of diminished quality of life in elderly persons
and occur in up to 40% of persons with Parkinson's disease. While the exact mechanisms have
not been determined, detrusor hyperactivity (hyperactivity of the bladder muscle) leading to
symptoms of overactive bladder and urge incontinence is common. Behavioral and
exercise-based therapies have relatively no side effects and have been shown to be an
effective treatment for urge symptoms of overactive bladder in the aged population.
Hypothesis and Specific Aims: Behavioral therapy using pelvic floor muscle exercises will
result in a 50% decrease in the number of incontinence episodes in elderly persons (age >
50) with Parkinson's disease. The specific aims for this pilot study include the following:
1. Complete a course of behavioral therapy using computer-assisted biofeedback in 20
subjects with UI associated with PD and determine how many potential subjects need to
be screened and enrolled to achieve this sample size.
2. Determine the proportion of these patients who achieve a 50% or greater reduction in UI
episodes.
3. Examine whether responsiveness is associated with characteristics of the Parkinson's
disease, in particular disease severity as measured by the Unified Parkinson's Disease
Rating Scale (UPDRS).
4. Assess the effectiveness of behavioral therapy without the use of computer-assisted
biofeedback instruction in 10 additional subjects with PD and UI.
Methods: The first 20 participants will be enrolled in an 8-week treatment trial of
behavioral therapies and pelvic floor muscle exercises with computer-assisted biofeedback.
Ten additional participants will be enrolled in the 8-week treatment trial of behavioral
therapy, but will not have computer-assisted biofeedback. Voiding diaries as well as
urinary symptom and quality of life questionnaires will be used to assess response.
If persons with Parkinson's disease can complete the treatment trial and achieve a reduction
in episodes of urinary incontinence with behavioral techniques this would lay the foundation
for a larger, placebo-controlled trial. Assessment of responsiveness associated with
severity of Parkinson's disease would also provide important information about the utility
of this treatment strategy.
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| Study summary: |
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| Criteria: |
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Inclusion Criteria:
- Clinical diagnosis of Parkinson's disease
- ≥4 weekly episodes of UI with >50% of accidents associated with feelings of urgency
where urgency is defined as the complaint of a sudden compelling desire to pass
urine, which is difficult to defer
- Willingness to attend clinic visits
- Willingness to keep bladder diaries
Exclusion criteria:
- Cognitive impairment, as evidenced by a Folstein mini-mental status examination
(MMSE) of < 24, or inability to produce an interpretable 7-day bladder diary
- Use of an indwelling urinary catheter
- Suggestion of bladder outlet obstruction as evidenced by having been prescribed
in-and-out catheterization in the past 12 months, having a post-void residual by
bladder ultrasound of ≥300 milliliters or a peak voiding flow rate of ≤ 4 mL/min on a
void ≥ 125 mL in volume
- Severe uterine prolapse past the vaginal introitus
- Poorly controlled diabetes defined by a hemoglobin A1c (HgbA1c) of >8.0%
- Chronic renal failure and on hemodialysis
- Poorly controlled congestive heart failure or poorly controlled chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease as evidenced on physical exam
- Genitourinary cancer with ongoing surgical or external beam radiation treatment
- Any unstable health condition expected to result in hospitalization or death within
in the next 3 months as determined by principal investigator. |
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| Study is available at: |
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Atlanta VA Medical Center Atlanta, GA 30033 United States
Primary Contact: Sabrina Ward Email: sabrina.ward2@va.gov Phone: 404 321 6111 |
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If you are interested in this clinical trial please use the contact information above. If you would like to get additional information about this clinical trial please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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| Data Source: |
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ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Date Processed: |
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March 23, 2011 |
Modifications to
this listing: |
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above to view all information about this clinical trial. |
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