Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05630742

Quality of Life Analysis in Bladder Pain Syndrome/Interstitial Cystitis

Quality of Life Analysis in Bladder Pain Syndrome/Interstitial Cystitis: Implications for a Multimodal Integrated Treatment

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
69 (actual)
Sponsor
Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo di Pavia · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 82 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of our study was to evaluate whether there is a higher prevalence of anxiety-depressive disorders in women with interstitial cystitis than in women with chronic non-neoplastic pain with or without fibromyalgia, to examine possible correlations between urological and psychiatric symptoms, analyze how urological symptoms affect psychological dimension, and how specific stress or trauma can contribute to the onset of interstitial cystitis.

Detailed description

The survey included 69 patients, 42 patients had a diagnosis of Bladder Pain Syndrome/Interstitial Cystitis while 27 of them had chronic non-neoplastic pain. The comparison of the total values of the PHQ-9 between the two groups, 1 versus 2, in relation to final score of PHQ-9, the average PHQ-9 score was 10.3 in group 1, therefore a value greater than 9, considered as major depression (score between 10 and 14); the average score of PHQ-9 was 6.9 in group 2, as in sub-threshold depression (between 5-9). Correlation between PHQ-9 and BPI was also evaluated, the relation was significant only in interstitial cystitis with regard to the following spheres: daily life, work activity, pleasure of life, mood, sleep quality, pain intensity, and urinary symptoms. Based on these data, when PHQ-9 score increases, and depressive symptoms worsen, there is interference with daily life and work activity, pleasure of living, mood, quality of sleep, perception of intensity of pain and urinary symptoms. Patients who had onset of psychiatric symptoms following diagnosis (both interstitial cystitis and other painful syndromes) had an average PHQ-9 score of 11.7 compared to the score of 8.3 of patients without onset of psychiatric symptoms after diagnosis (p = 0.0464), so it may be that depressive symptoms starting after the diagnosis of pain syndrome are more severe. Women who undergo psychiatric-psychological consultation and therapy have an average O'Leary score 20.4 compared to 25.8 in those who are not under psychiatric consultation (p = 0.0418). This emphasizes how psychosocial support can improve perception of pain and urinary symptoms.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERchronic non-neoplastic paincomparison of questionnaires scores

Timeline

Start date
2021-11-01
Primary completion
2022-07-31
Completion
2022-09-01
First posted
2022-11-30
Last updated
2022-11-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05630742. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Quality of Life Analysis in Bladder Pain Syndrome/Interstitial Cystitis (NCT05630742) · Clinical Trials Directory