Pelvic Floor Muscle Training and Biofeedback or Standard Therapy in Men Who Have Undergone Radical Prostatectomy or Transurethral Resection of the Prostate

Last updated: August 6, 2013
Sponsor: Aberdeen Royal Infirmary
Overall Status: Completed

Phase

3

Condition

Prostate Cancer

Sexual Dysfunction

Enuresis

Treatment

N/A

Clinical Study ID

NCT00632138
ABROIN-MAPS
CDR0000586420
ISRCTN87696430
  • Male

Study Summary

RATIONALE: Personalized training by a health professional may improve urinary incontinence. It is not yet known whether pelvic floor muscle training and biofeedback are more effective than standard therapy in improving urinary continence after radical prostatectomy or transurethral resection of the prostate.

PURPOSE: This randomized phase III trial is studying pelvic floor muscle training and biofeedback to see how well it works compared with standard therapy in men who have undergone radical prostatectomy or transurethral resection.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:

  • Men who have undergone a radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer or men who have undergone a transurethral resection of the prostate for benign prostatic hypertrophy

  • Urinary incontinence at six weeks after prostate surgery

  • Incontinence is defined as a response on the screening questionnaire indicating a loss of urine including how often and how much

PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:

  • Able to comply with intervention

  • Able to complete study questionnaires

PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:

  • See Disease Characteristics

  • No referral for formal therapy (teaching of pelvic floor muscle training) due to prostate surgery

  • No concurrent or planned radiotherapy during the first 3 months after surgery

  • No palliative endoscopic resection of prostate due to outflow obstruction for advanced prostate cancer

Study Design

Total Participants: 800
Study Start date:
January 01, 2005
Estimated Completion Date:
July 31, 2011

Study Description

OBJECTIVES:

  • To establish whether conservative physical treatment delivered personally by a trained health professional results in better urinary and other outcomes compared with standard management in men who are incontinence after prostate surgery.

OUTLINE: This is a multicenter study. Patients are stratified according to type of operation (radical prostatectomy vs transurethral resection of prostate). Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 treatment arms.

  • Arm I (intervention group): At 6 weeks after surgery, patients undergo an assessment of their symptoms by a physiotherapist or continence nurse. All patients are taught pelvic floor muscle training and men with urgency or urge incontinence are also taught bladder training. Pelvic floor training consists of 3 maximum pelvic floor contractions in 3 positions (standing, sitting, and lying down) twice a day, lifting of the pelvic floor while walking, tightening of the pelvic muscles before activities, and tightening of the pelvic muscles after urinating to squeeze out any last drops. The strength of the pelvic floor contractions is monitored by biofeedback involving digital anal assessment and relaying the information back to men in order that they know when they are performing contractions correctly and to inform them when they are increasing the strength or duration of their contractions. Therapists may use machine-mediated biofeedback with an anal biofeedback probe at their discretion in addition to digital anal assessment. Bladder training consists of gradually delaying urination by pelvic floor muscle contraction and distracting activities to teach the bladder to hold increasing volumes of urine. Patients also receive a customized Pelvic Floor Exercise Booklet describing pelvic floor muscle training in addition to a customized Lifestyle Advice Booklet giving general lifestyle advice. Patients have reinforcement sessions at approximately 2, 6, and 12 weeks after the first appointment.

  • Arm II (control group): Patients receive a customized Lifestyle Advice Booklet containing supportive lifestyle advice only (without reference to pelvic floor muscle training) by mail following randomization. Patients do not receive formal assessment or treatment but will be able to access usual care and routine NHS services if they feel they need help, including written advice if this is part of routine hospital care.

All patients keep a urinary diary at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months that includes frequency of urination (day and night), daily episodes of incontinence and quantity of loss, daily use of pads, and the need to change clothing or bedding. A Health Care Utilization Questionnaire will be obtained at 3 and 9 months. Additional questionnaires are obtained at baseline and 6 and 12 months.

The use of NHS services, pads, and practice of pelvic floor muscle training is documented in both groups using information from questionnaires and Urinary Diaries.

Six months after the last patient has been recruited, a check for Scottish men only is performed to compare self-reported operations, diagnoses, and hospital admissions with centrally collected data to validate a proportion of the data.

After completion of study treatment, patients are followed at 6 and 12 months.

Connect with a study center

  • Tameside General Hospital

    Ashton-Under-Lyne, England OL6 9RW
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Bristol Royal Infirmary

    Bristol, England BS2 8HW
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Southmead Hospital

    Bristol, England BS10 5NB
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Mid Cheshire Hospitals Trust- Leighton Hopsital

    Crewe, England CW1 4QJ
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Royal Bolton Hospital

    Farnworth, England BL4 0JR
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • King George Hospital

    Ilford, Essex, England IG3 8YB
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Ipswich Hospital

    Ipswich, England IP4 5PD
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Airedale General Hospital

    Keighley, England BD20 6TD
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Leeds Cancer Centre at St. James's University Hospital

    Leeds, England LS9 7TF
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • St. Mary's Hospital

    London, England W2 1NY
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Macclesfield District General Hospital

    Macclesfield, England SK10 3BL
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • James Cook University Hospital

    Middlesbrough, England TS4 3BW
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Freeman Hospital

    Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, England NE7 7DN
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital

    Norwich, England NR4 7UY
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Nottingham City Hospital

    Nottingham, England NG5 1PB
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Berkshire Cancer Centre at Royal Berkshire Hospital

    Reading, England RG1 5AN
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Queens Hospital

    Romford, England RM3 0BE
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Hope Hospital

    Salford, England M6 8HD
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Royal Hallamshire Hospital

    Sheffield, England S1O 2JF
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Lister Hospital

    Stevenage, England SG1 4AB
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Stepping Hill Hospital

    Stockport, England SK2 7JE
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Taunton and Somerset Hospital

    Taunton, England TA1 5DA
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Hillingdon Hospital

    Uxbridge, England UB8 3NN
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • New Cross Hospital

    Wolverhampton, England WV10 0QP
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Yeovil District Hospital

    Yeovil, England BA21 4AT
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Aberdeen Royal Infirmary

    Aberdeen, Scotland AB25 2ZN
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Ayr Hospital

    Ayr, Scotland KA6 6DX
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Ninewells Hospital

    Dundee, Scotland DD1 9SY
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Queen Margaret Hospital - Dunfermline

    Dunfermline, Scotland KY12 0SU
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Edinburgh Cancer Centre at Western General Hospital

    Edinburgh, Scotland EH4 2XU
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Falkirk and District Royal Infirmary

    Falkirk, Scotland FK1 5QE
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Southern General Hospital

    Glasgow, Scotland G51 4TF
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Inverclyde Royal Hospital

    Greenock, Scotland PA16 0XN
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Raigmore Hospital

    Inverness, Scotland 1V2 3UJ
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Pinderfields General Hospital

    Wakefield, Scotland WF1 4DG
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • Morriston Hospital NHS Trust

    West Glamorgen, Scotland SA6 6NL
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

  • University Hospital of Wales

    Cardiff, Wales CF14 4XW
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

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