Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04505956

A Comparison of Ureteroscopic Treatment of Nephrolithiasis With and Without Moses Technology

Prospective Randomized Double Blind Clinical Trial to Compare Holmium Laser Lithotripsy With and Without Moses Laser Technology for the Ureteroscopic Treatment of Nephrolithiasis

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
171 (actual)
Sponsor
Vanderbilt University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Flexible ureteroscopy is characterized as first-line therapy for the treatment of renal stones \< 2 cm in size. This involves passing a flexible endoscope into the renal pelvis through the urethra, bladder and ureter in a retrograde fashion. Holmium: YAG laser remains the preferred energy modality to subsequently break stones of this size into fragments small enough to remove or pass spontaneously through the ureter. Advances in the understanding of laser energy delivery have led to the recent commercialization of the "Moses Effect" - the creation of vapor bubbles/cavities between the laser fiber tip and the target through which laser energy can more efficiently travel. Lumenis was the first to optimize this laser phenomenon and market it as "Moses Technology" in their Lumenis Pulse P120H laser system. This system is already FDA approved through the 510K pathway and is commercially available. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the potential of Moses laser technology to reduce operative time compared to non-Moses settings for ureteroscopic treatment of nephrolithiasis.

Detailed description

There is ongoing debate on the optimal means of laser stone fragmentation, and Moses technology is the latest advancement to raise questions regarding clinical utility. Initial preclinical studies demonstrated significantly reduced stone retropulsion and higher stone ablation volume with Moses technology, leading to the conclusion that the system allows more efficient laser lithotripsy. Human studies also showed that laser lithotripsy with Moses technology utilized laser energy in less time for stone fragmentation: 10.0 (2.6-15.0) min without vs 6.0 (2.8-13.0) min with Moses technology. Others have evaluated the cost effectiveness of Moses technology in their own cohort of 40 patients who underwent standard laser lithotripsy by comparing a 35% projected decrease in procedure time against the cost of the Moses laser fiber and machine. Mean stone size was 10.2 mm in this group of patients, and mean lasing time was 3.0 minutes. While a significant positive association was seen between stone size and laser time, cost analysis failed to show a benefit in using Moses technology across sizes. To date, there are limited clinical data obtained through rigorous study methodology. In addition, knowledge gaps remain regarding the effect of Moses technology on other clinically meaningful outcomes such as stone-free rate. Therefore, the investigators propose a multi-center, prospective, randomized, double blind clinical trial to further assess the effect of Moses technology for lithotripsy. The investigators aim to study a broader range of outcomes which will be facilitated by being the largest study to date. The investigators also aim to study novel outcomes such as grading retropulsion and visibility by independent blinded review as well as effects of Moses technology on independently reducing surgeon burnout. Indeed, a randomized, double blind clinical trial evaluating Moses technology in 66 patients undergoing ureteroscopy was presented as a 2018 European Association of Urology abstract. While this single center study demonstrated safety and reduced fragmentation time as well as procedure time using Moses technology, it did not show a significant difference in stone-free rates. This study is also yet to be published as a manuscript.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHolmium laser lithotripsy with Moses TechnologyHolmium laser energy will be delivered for the ureteroscopic fragmenting of kidney stones. Energy will be generated by the commercial available, FDA approved Lumenis PulseTM P120H laser system and Moses laser fiber. Renal stones will be fragmented using a dusting technique. Moses laser settings will be turned on.
DEVICEHolmium laser lithotripsy without Moses TechnologyHolmium laser energy will be delivered for the ureteroscopic fragmenting of kidney stones. Energy will be generated by the commercial available, FDA approved Lumenis PulseTM P120H laser system and Moses laser fiber. Renal stones will be fragmented using a dusting technique. Moses laser settings will be turned off.

Timeline

Start date
2021-01-13
Primary completion
2023-08-01
Completion
2023-12-01
First posted
2020-08-10
Last updated
2024-10-09
Results posted
2024-10-09

Locations

6 sites across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04505956. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.