In this study, the investigators are testing a new formulation of lidocaine for its suitability in managing chronic scrotal pain (CSCP). The new formulation ST-CP is a lidocaine sustained-release formulation and is expected to provide pain relief over 4 weeks. Currently, the drug lidocaine is not available as an injectable slow-release formulation and chronic scrotal pain patients are often left untreated.
The purpose of this study is to find out if a new polymeric, water-free formulation of lidocaine is safe and can provide effective, long-lasting pain relief in chronic scrotal pain (CSCP) patients. This new formulation ST-CP is injected into the spermatic cord of patients in a very comparable way that the currently available lidocaine solution (Lidocaine HCl 1% USP) is administered. The only difference is that the polymer solution stays in the area of injection longer by forming a soft implant. The investigators therefore hypothesize that the polymer formulation of lidocaine will release the drug over an extended period of time and will not dissolve away like the currently used lidocaine solution (Lidocaine HCl 1%, USP). This will lead to long-lasting pain relief for CSCP patients. The investigators' primary objective is to determine if the single injection of our polymeric lidocaine formulation is well tolerated by patients with CSCP. Secondary objectives are to determine the duration and extent of pain relief, the impact of ST-CP on pain-related quality of life and the systemic exposure to lidocaine. The clinical study is conducted at the Vancouver Prostate Centre. Potential participants will undergo a screening period to determine basal pain levels over 7 days and test their ability to respond to a spermatic cord block with a standard lidocaine injection (Lidocaine HCl 1%, USP). Up to 15 men will receive our ST-CP study formulation and will be monitored over the the following 4 weeks. Follow-up procedures will include blood draws, daily pain evaluations and standard questionnaires on scrotal pain and erectile function. Up to 3 dose levels are planned but dose escalation will only occur once the previous cohort (3 patients) has completed the follow up and safety assessment. Summary descriptive statistics (including mean and standard deviation, median, range, proportion) will be provided for important parameters and outcome measures. These include subject demographics, subject disposition, subject compliance, pharmakokinetic laboratory test outcomes, overall adverse events, adverse events related to lidocaine and adverse events related to study procedure. Pain scores and questionnaires will be summarized by score and pre- and post- treatment levels will be compared.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
12
Sustained-release lidocaine injection
Department of Urologic Sciences, Gordon & Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Adverse Events
Determination of safety and tolerability of the study treatment ST-CP through the assessment of adverse events
Time frame: 28 days
NRS Pain Score
Determination of daily maximum pain score over 14 and 28 days
Time frame: 28 days
Validated Chronic Epididymitis Symptom Index (CESI)
Determination of the pain associated quality of life
Time frame: 28 days
Validated International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF-5)
Determination of erectile function associated quality of life
Time frame: 28 days
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