Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT05643950

Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of the T-Control® Catheter in Patients With Acute Urine Retention

Evaluation of the Efficacy and Cost-effectiveness of the T-Control® Catheter Versus the Foley Type Catheter in Patients With Acute Urinary Retention. Randomized Controlled Pilot Clinical Trial

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Rethink Medical SL · Industry
Sex
Male
Age
50 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The general purpose of this study is to assess the preliminary effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the T-Control® catheter versus the Foley type catheter in patients with Acute Urine Retention.

Detailed description

Potential participants will be identified by the team of healthcare professionals of the emergency department according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria of the study. If the patient meets the criteria, the emergency department team will be able to refer patients directly to the urology department, where the investigator or research assistant will again check the inclusion and exclusion criteria, will invite the patient or their relative/caregiver (if necessary) to participate in the study and will request their informed consent. The catheter insertion will be carried out by the research staff after the inclusion and randomisation of the participants. After catheter insertion, participants and their family, friends, or other informal caregivers will receive information about wearing an indwelling urinary catheter and specific information to randomly inserted, standard Foley, or T-Control® catheters. Standard catheter care is permitted during the trial both managed by the participants and participants' caregivers. Additionally, participants will receive an incident diary in which participants can record any type of incident during the bladder catheterisation period. Two weeks after indwelling bladder catheter insertion, participants will be contacted by urology outpatients for a follow-up visit, during which the study catheter will be removed. Finally, within a maximum period of two weeks after the follow-up visit, the participants will be invited to participate in an interview to assess the quality of life perceived by the participants during the study

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEFoley catheterSilicone Foley catheters are transurethral balloon catheters used for the treatment of bladder emptying disorders, as well as for drainage of urine from the urinary tract, continuous fluid irrigation, and/or medication administration. Its use is suitable for a prolonged period of no more than 29 days and is used in Urology, Internal Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynaecology Services. For this study, conventional Foley-type catheters whose use is approved in Spain for routine use will be used. Silicone Foley catheters, usually available in 2- and 3-way, are made of silicone and consist of a body, drainage funnel, inflation funnel, irrigation funnel (if present, only on 3-way catheters) and balloon valve. The product is sterile and single use.
DEVICET-Control catheterThe T-control® catheter is a flexible, sterile silicone tube with an inflatable balloon at the distal tip, a polytetrafluroethylene membrane integrated into its body, and a sliding fluid control valve. The valve, built into the catheter, provides additional functions to the catheter, such as turning urine flow on and off after insertion (functions currently provided by accessories such as caps or valves) and controlling urination during the insertion process (function that is not provided by any other device). In this way, accidental loss of urine can be avoided from the first moment of use until its withdrawal. Additionally, it has a safety cap that reduces the possibility of accidental movements of the valve before use or during transport and fixing. The design has been developed in such a way that, once inserted, it facilitates autonomous use even for the elderly or patients with limited manual dexterity. The device is sterile and single use, like any conventional Foley catheter.

Timeline

Start date
2023-08-01
Primary completion
2023-12-01
Completion
2024-04-01
First posted
2022-12-09
Last updated
2023-12-27

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05643950. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.