Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03332056

The Use of Belladonna and Opium Suppository in the Treatment of Postoperative Stent Pain

The Use of Belladonna and Opium (B&O) Suppository in the Treatment of Postoperative Stent Pain: A Randomized, Double-Blinded Control Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
71 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Washington · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine if preemptive B\&O suppository placement will decrease post-operative pain in patients undergoing ureteral stent placement.

Detailed description

Purpose: Nephrolithiasis has an incidence of 10-15% in the US with 66% of practicing urologists placing a ureteral stent after each procedure. Ureteral stents are commonly placed to prevent or alleviate ureteral obstruction and ureteral stents are not well tolerated with up to 80% of patients reporting stent discomfort. These symptoms include urinary frequency, urgency, dysuria and incomplete emptying. Patients also frequently report suprapubic pain, hematuria and incontinence. Ureteral stents are placed either alone or in conjunction with other surgeries where ureteral access is obtained. To date, however, there is no convincing data that altering stent characteristics or the use of a single drug dramatically improves stent discomfort for patients. Prior studies on oral therapies including alpha blockers and anti-muscarinics have shown some promise in improving stent comfort, however, they are typically used after the ureteral stent is placed and the patient has recovered from anesthesia. Other studies have shown no difference in stent symptoms in these two classes of drugs. The Belladonna and Opium (B\&O) suppository is a potent anti-muscarinic medication with narcotic properties. It frequently is used as a second line drug for patients with severe bladder spasms refractory to first line anti-muscarinic and narcotic medications from an indwelling Foley catheter or ureteral stent. It has shown efficacy for Foley catheter discomfort in patients undergoing robotic prostatectomies, but its use in the perioperative period has not been studied for ureteral stent discomfort. The purpose of this study is to determine if preemptive B\&O suppository placement will decrease post-operative pain in patients undergoing ureteral stent placement. Procedures: The study is a randomized double-blind controlled trial comparing the use of a B\&O suppository versus placebo suppository for the preemptive treatment of ureteral stent discomfort. 70 subjects will be recruited from the outpatient urologic clinic under the care of a single surgeon with appropriate informed consent. At the time of recruitment, patients will complete a validated AUA symptom score questionnaire in order to establish baseline symptom scores and urinary bother. Patients will be randomized into a treatment arm or a placebo arm. Those randomized to the treatment arm will receive a single B\&O suppository, dose-weight calculated, immediately following patient positioning prior to instrumentation. Those randomized to the other arm will receive a single placebo suppository. The suppository will be administered by the circulating operative nurse and the remainder of the surgical team will be blinded to the study drug. Following treatment and stent placement, all patients will receive standard post-operative pain management (hydrocodone/acetaminophen, docusate, and tamsulosin) with usual discharge instructions. Subject Population: Primary study population is patients who will receive ureteroscopy with concurrent placement of a ureteral stent. Primary exclusion criteria include age \< 18, neurologic deficits of any kind and non-English speaking patients.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGBelladonna and Opium
OTHERPlacebo suppository

Timeline

Start date
2013-08-01
Primary completion
2014-10-01
Completion
2015-10-01
First posted
2017-11-06
Last updated
2023-06-18
Results posted
2023-06-18

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03332056. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.