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Efficacy of Sacral Nerve Stimulation Before Definitive Implantation (SNStest)

L

Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV)

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Fecal Incontinence

Treatments

Procedure: sacral nerve stimulation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00522691
CHV120/07

Details and patient eligibility

About

Sacral nerve stimulation (SNS) is an emerging treatment for patients with severe fecal incontinence. The test stimulation is minimally invasive, associated to low morbidity and relatively cheap. On the contrary, implantation of the definite stimulator is related to higher morbidity and considerable costs. A careful patent selection for definite implantation is therefore crucial. However, indication for implantation is actually based only on the subjective criteria reported in the patients´ diary only. Patients and care providers are likely to overestimate the real effect of SNS leading to an unjustified overuse of this expensive device. It is therefore necessary to evaluate real efficacy of SNS during the testing phase in a unbiased setting in order to avoid unnecessary morbidity and costs.

Full description

Sacral nerve stimulation (SNS) is an emerging treatment for patients with severe faecal incontinence when conservative measures fail and surgical repair is not indicated. In a minimally-invasive approach and under local anaesthesia, an electrode is placed around sacral nerve root S2-4 and electrical stimulation is applied to the sacral spinal nerves. Effectiveness of SNS is definitively not only explained by placebo effect but the pathophysiologic mechanisms remain unclear. Suggested pathways include modulation of afferent nerve fibres and direct stimulation of the pelvic floor and anal sphincter muscle. After placement of the electrode, the patient is stimulated by an external stimulator for 1-3 weeks. During this period, the patient documents the number of faecal incontinence episodes or urgencies in a symptom diary. By convention, indication for permanent stimulation is based on a 50% reduction in the number of episodes. After a successful testing period, the permanent stimulator is implanted, generally in the upper gluteal region.

Previous studies report success rates up to 80%. The only randomized trial with a proper sample size evaluated the efficacy of SNS after definite implantation. In this study, 63% of the patients felt improved during the placebo period and might not really benefit from the device. The real success rate of SNS is therefore likely to be considerably lower. Efficacy of SNS during the testing phase has never been assessed in a blinded randomized study.

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All patients admitted to SNS test for treatment of faecal incontinence after unsuccessful conservative (or surgical) treatment.

Exclusion criteria

  • Absence of informed consent.
  • Patients not speaking french or german.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

0 participants in 2 patient groups

A: sacral first
Experimental group
Description:
Phase 1: sacral nerve stimulation crossover Phase 2 : sham stimulation
Treatment:
Procedure: sacral nerve stimulation
B: sham first
Experimental group
Description:
Phase 1: sham stimulation crossover Phase 2: sacral nerve stimulation
Treatment:
Procedure: sacral nerve stimulation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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