Trials / Not Yet Recruiting
Not Yet RecruitingNCT07204301
Enhancing Patient Comfort and Reducing Anxiety During Flexible Cystoscopy and Bladder Instillation in Bladder Cancer Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial and Observational Study
- Status
- Not Yet Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 378 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Western University, Canada · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if certain comfort-enhancing interventions can reduce pain and anxiety during flexible cystoscopy and bladder instillation in patients with bladder cancer. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Do these interventions reduce patient-reported anxiety during the procedure? * Do these interventions reduce patient-reported pain or discomfort during the procedure? Researchers will compare patients receiving comfort interventions (such as timing of anesthetic gel, calming music, or visual distraction) to those receiving standard care to see if these changes improve patient experience. Participants will: * Undergo a flexible cystoscopy or bladder instillation as part of their usual care * Be randomly assigned to receive one or more comfort interventions, or standard care * Complete short questionnaires about their pain, comfort, and anxiety
Detailed description
Bladder cancer is one of the most common malignancies of the urinary tract, and many patients require frequent endoscopic procedures as part of diagnosis, treatment, and surveillance. Flexible cystoscopy and intravesical instillation are standard procedures but are often associated with patient discomfort, anxiety, and negative procedural experiences. Improving comfort during these procedures has the potential to increase patient satisfaction, reduce procedural avoidance, and improve adherence to follow-up care. Rationale Although flexible cystoscopy is minimally invasive, it can cause pain, embarrassment, and significant anxiety. Standard strategies to improve patient comfort, such as intravesical anesthetic gel, are variably effective. Previous work suggests that environmental modifications (e.g., calming music, ambient lighting), behavioral strategies (e.g., distraction), and optimization of local anesthetic use may enhance the patient experience. However, rigorous randomized controlled data in the cystoscopy and bladder instillation setting are lacking. This study will address this gap by systematically evaluating comfort-enhancing interventions during flexible cystoscopy and bladder instillation for bladder cancer patients. Study Objectives The primary objective is to determine whether comfort interventions reduce patient-reported anxiety and pain during flexible cystoscopy and bladder instillation procedures. Secondary objectives include: * To assess whether these interventions improve overall patient satisfaction. * To determine whether these interventions influence willingness to undergo repeat procedures. * To explore procedural efficiency, clinician satisfaction, and feasibility of implementing these interventions in routine care. Study Design This study includes both a randomized controlled trial (RCT) and an observational component. Randomized Controlled Trial (Interventional Arm): Participants will be randomly assigned to receive standard care or a comfort interventions, such as: * Optimized timing of intravesical anesthetic gel * Calming background music * Visual distraction or environmental modifications * Ambient lighting changes Outcomes will be assessed using validated questionnaires (e.g., visual analogue scales for pain and anxiety, standardized patient-reported outcome measures). Observational Arm: Parallel to the RCT, observational data will be collected from a cohort undergoing flexible cystoscopy or intravesical instillation under standard care conditions. This will allow comparison with historical and real-world data, provide additional context for generalizability, and help inform the feasibility of widespread adoption of interventions. Participant Population Participants will include adults undergoing flexible cystoscopy or bladder instillation for bladder cancer. Eligibility is broad to maximize generalizability, with minimal exclusion criteria. Translation services and literacy supports will be offered to ensure equitable participation. Study Procedures * All participants will undergo flexible cystoscopy or intravesical instillation as clinically indicated. * RCT participants will be randomized to intervention vs. standard care groups. * Participants will complete short questionnaires before, during, and after the procedure assessing comfort, pain, and anxiety. * Follow-up will include willingness to undergo repeat procedures and satisfaction ratings. Outcomes * Primary outcomes: Patient-reported pain and anxiety scores. * Secondary outcomes: Overall satisfaction, willingness to repeat procedure, efficiency measures, and clinician feedback. Significance This study will generate high-quality evidence on practical, low-cost, and easily implementable interventions to improve the patient experience during routine urological procedures. Findings may inform best practice guidelines, enhance patient-centered care, and support broader adoption of comfort-enhancing strategies in cystoscopy services.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Optimized Timing of Intravesical Lidocaine Gel | Procedural modification of intravesical anesthetic gel administration. Lidocaine gel is instilled before and after flexible cystoscopy or bladder instillation to optimize mucosal anesthesia. This differs from standard practice where timing is not standardized - usually just before flexible cystoscopy. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Calming Music During Procedure | Participants listen to a standardized playlist of calming instrumental music delivered through headphones during the procedure. Intervention is intended to reduce procedural anxiety and discomfort. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Visual Distraction with Screen Content | Participants watch standardized visual content (e.g., relaxing video) on a screen or tablet during cystoscopy or bladder instillation. Designed to distract attention and enhance comfort. |
| OTHER | Calming Ambient Lighting | Flexible cystoscopy or intravesical instillation performed under standardized calming ambient lighting (blue-hue) instead of standard clinical lighting. Intervention aims to promote relaxation and reduce anxiety. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Peak-End Modification of Procedure | Modification of the procedural ending based on the psychological "peak-end rule." The end of the cystoscopy or instillation is deliberately altered to reduce final discomfort, aiming to improve overall remembered patient experience. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2025-11-01
- Primary completion
- 2026-07-01
- Completion
- 2026-07-01
- First posted
- 2025-10-02
- Last updated
- 2025-10-02
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Canada
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07204301. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.