Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the efficacy of a posterior perineal block performed under neurostimulation at 1 month after local anesthetic infiltration in the treatment of chronic idiopathic ano-perineal pain.
The main questions aims to answer are :
Participants will :
Researchers will compare between the two treatment arms (lidocaine versus saline solution) to see the rate of patients with a reduction of at least 3 points on a visual analog pain scale between inclusion and 1 month after the first injection.
Full description
Chronic idiopathic ano-perineal pain (CICA) is defined as anoperineal pain involving the anal region that has been present for more than 3 months, and for which no cause has been identified on clinical examination or further investigations (MRI). The mechanisms underlying this pain are multiple, but involve the pudendal nerve in the majority of cases.
Therapeutic management of CDAD is based on 3 treatment strategies of progressively increasing aggressiveness: drug treatment, infiltrations and decompressive surgery.
Drug treatment is based on the empirical use of neuropathic pain medications with proven efficacy in other areas (shingles, diabetes, etc.). Patients are generally considered to be non-responders to drug treatment after failure (decrease in VAS scale < 3) of at least one antidepressant and one antiepileptic, whose dosages have been brought up to the maximum possible, or in whom a side effect has prevented the dose from being increased to its authorized maximum.
Therapeutic infiltrations most often involve the pudendal nerve (ITNP). Infiltration of the posterior branches of the sacrococcygeal roots is sometimes associated, to create a posterior perineal block (PPB). There is no consensus or recommendation on which molecules to use.
In most studies, a combination of local anesthetics and corticosteroids was used. However, Labat et al published the only randomized controlled trial comparing lidocaine infiltration of the pudendal nerve with or without methylprednisolone. Results were not significantly different (14% vs. 11%).
According to the literature, short-term pain relief up to 3 months was achieved in less than half of patients (11% to 39%) , and at 1 year, pain relief was still present in only around 10% (6.8% to 12.2%) of patients. The only recognized risk factor for failure appears to be the duration of pain (greater than 1 year). Other risk factors have been described in the literature, but only in one study and not in the others such as gender (male or female), age (over or under 70), duration of pain (over or under 1 year), and whether the pain is bilateral or not .
Currently, in our department, patients are treated with lidocaine BPP under neurostimulation. Given the poor results in terms of efficacy and the strong psychological component in chronic pain pathologies, investigators propose in this study to compare our usual management against placebo. Indeed, no type of infiltration has ever been compared to a placebo
-Main objective: evaluate the efficacy of BPP performed under neurostimulation on pain at 1 month after local anesthetic infiltration in the treatment of SCID.
Primary endpoint:
Comparison between the two treatment arms (lidocaine versus saline solution) of the rate of patients with a reduction of at least 3 points on a visual analog pain scale (VAS) between inclusion and 1 month after the first injection.
-Secondary objectives:
Compare between the two treatment arms:
At the end of the interventional phase, patients will be managed according to the department's usual procedures. Accepting patients will be included in a follow-up cohort for one year.
Secondary endpoints:
Research procedures Placebo arm: Infiltration by injections of 6mL saline per injection site (left ischial-anal fossa, right ischial-anal fossa, coccyx).
Treatment arm: Infiltration by injections of 6mL lidocaine (10 mg/mL) per injection site (left ischio-anal fossa, right ischio-anal fossa, coccyx).
-Practical research procedure Pre-inclusion visit (D0-min 1 week) Eligible patients will be identified during the proctology consultation. They will be given an information note about the study and will have at least 1 week to think about it before the next consultation.
Inclusion visit and 1st infiltration (D0)
Telephone call: patients with a positive response will be called two months later (i.e. 3 months after infiltration) for a telephone evaluation of VAS. In the event of a VAS increase of more than 2 points, a proctology consultation will be proposed.
Adverse events (AEs) and serious adverse events (SAEs) will also be recorded during the telephone call.
End-of-study visit:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Valérie Millul, RC manager
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal