Prospective, randomized, controlled, single-center study to compare the feasibility of home monitoring for patients receiving intradetrusor botulinum toxin injections with that of the usual hospital-based follow-up.
Overactive bladder (OAB) affects seventeen percent of the French population and is characterized by a sudden urge to urinate, urinary frequency, with or without incontinence. Botulinum toxin, injected into the bladder every 6 to 12 months, is an effective treatment. In 2022, more than 10,000 injections were performed in France (ATIH data). At the Grenoble University Hospital (CHUGA), 190 injections were recorded in 2018 and 300 in 2023. As elsewhere, the active patient cohort is increasing exponentially. Treatment efficacy is assessed using a voiding diary (VD): a three-day record of each voiding episode with bladder capacity, frequency, and leakage. It is essential to detect the onset of voiding dysfunction through uroflowmetry and ultrasound measurement of post-void residual (PVR) at 6 weeks after injection (peak diffusion and efficacy). This allows determining the dose and frequency of reinjections. The goal is to improve quality of life, but also to protect the upper urinary tract, particularly in neurogenic bladders. These 300 annual injections require 300 follow-up consultations, but many data points are often missing. Indeed, patients currently often attend post-injection consultations without a voiding diary and with a non-empty bladder… It is therefore important to improve this follow-up. With our VESIC@HOME project, we aim to provide patients with the services of the home-care provider IC@dom and, thanks to suitable connected tools (Homeflow®), collect VD and uroflowmetry/PVR at home, as well as quality-of-life questionnaires, thereby improving data completeness under more physiological and comfortable conditions for the patient.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
112
6-week follow-up visit: At home (The service provider will bring the necessary equipment for the various measurements and the questionnaires, and will explain their use to the patient. The provider will return to collect the equipment and perform a post-void residual (PVR) measurement 72 hours later.)
To compare the feasibility of home follow-up in patients receiving intradetrusor botulinum toxin injections with that of the usual hospital-based follow-up
Rate of completeness of data collected at home compared with data collected in the hospital setting. To be considered complete, the data must include: The 3-day/3-night bladder diary (including the time and volume of each void); a diary is considered complete even if 3 measurements over the 72-hour period are missing (this accounts for possible patient appointments). The urinary symptom questionnaire (Urinary Symptom Profile, USP); Uroflowmetry and post-void residual measurements (only for patients who do not perform intermittent self-catheterization). All of these data are necessary to address the objective. We cannot separate them, as they serve the same objective.
Time frame: at 8 weeks
Compare urinary symptoms according to the type of follow-up.
USP (urinary symptoms profil) questionnaire score at 6-8 weeks post-injection. Score ranging from 0 to 33; the higher the score, the more incontinent the patient is.
Time frame: at 8 weeks
Compare functional outcomes ( Normal bladder emptying with not significant post-void residual) according to the type of follow-up in patients with spontaneous voiding.
Uroflowmetry results and post-void residual (PVR) at 6-8 weeks post-injection both criteria are required to evaluate the same outcome
Time frame: at 8 weeks
Compare complications according to the type of follow-up.
Adverse events occurring up to 6-8 weeks post-injection: urinary retention requiring self- or caregiver catheterization, symptomatic urinary tract infection with or without fever.
Time frame: at 8 weeks
Compare overall quality of life according to the type of follow-up.
EQ-5D-5L scale at 6-8 weeks post-injection.
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Time frame: at 8 weeks