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Efficacy of a Physiotherapy Treatment in Women Suffering From Provoked Vestibulodynia

U

Université de Sherbrooke

Status

Completed

Conditions

Vestibulodynia

Treatments

Procedure: Multimodal physiotherapy
Drug: lidocaine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01455350
MOP-115028

Details and patient eligibility

About

Chronic gynaecological pain is a major medical problem that affects 20-30% of women at different moments of their life. This largely neglected issue has a significant impact on the sexual and conjugal life of women suffering from it as well as on their psychological health. Furthermore, this kind of pain is not well understood, often misdiagnosed or even totally ignored. Also, treatment is limited and not extensively studied. This study aims at better understanding and treating gynaecological pain. The focus of the study will be provoked vestibulodynia, pain at the entry of the vagina. The efficacy of specialized pelvic floor physiotherapy will be compared to a topical cream (lidocaine) applied to the vulva. The treatment efficacy will be assessed in 234 women (aged from 18-45 years old) suffering from provoked vestibulodynia recruited in 4 hospitals (CHUS, Jewish General Hospital, Royal-Victoria Hospital, CHUM St-Luc).

Full description

This is a randomised controlled trial comparing the impact of multimodal physiotherapy treatments to topical lidocaine in women suffering from provoked vestibulodyina. The first treatment consists of 10 sixty minutes weekly physiotherapy treatments including relaxation techniques, stretching and pelvic floor muscle control exercises. The second treatment is a night time application of lidocaine to the vulva for 10 weeks. Physiotherapists will then evaluate women's pain and sexual function right after the treatment and 6 months later.

Enrollment

212 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Moderate to severe pain in at least 90% of sexual intercourses.
  • Moderate to severe pain during the cotton-swab test at one of more vestibule regions (5/10 minimum pain evaluation on the verbal pain intensity scale).
  • Pain limited to the vestibule during vaginal penetrations and during activities applying pressure on the vestibule.
  • Provoked vestibulodynia lasting at least 6 months prior to the study and diagnosed by a standardised gynaecologic exam protocol by one of our collaborator.

Exclusion criteria

  • Major psychiatric condition or pelvic pathology associated with a genital pain problem (e.g.: dyspareunia).
  • Use of medication that could influence pain perception.
  • Actual or past pregnancy.
  • Vulvar or vaginal surgery
  • Post-menopausal state
  • Unwillingness to restrain from other treatments till the 6 months post-treatment evaluation.
  • Urogynaecologic symptoms (urinary/anal incontinence, pelvic organs prolapsus, urinary/vaginal infection active or during the last 3 months).
  • Incapacity to have sexual intercourse including vaginal penetration during the last 6 months.
  • Physiotherapy treatments or lidocaine application prior to the study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

212 participants in 2 patient groups

Lidocaine
Active Comparator group
Description:
10 week treatment of daily application of topical lidocaine
Treatment:
Drug: lidocaine
Multimodal physiotherapy
Experimental group
Description:
10 weeks of weekly multimodal physiotherapy treatments
Treatment:
Procedure: Multimodal physiotherapy

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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