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HIFEM for Incontinence After Menopause High-Intensity Focused Electromagnetic (HIFEM) (HIM2025)

G

Göteborg University

Status

Begins enrollment in 8 months

Conditions

Urinary Incontinence (UI)

Treatments

Other: Pelvic Floor exercises
Device: Pelvic floor training as described in point a above, with the addition of HIFEM.

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07260604
FoU in Sweden 284879

Details and patient eligibility

About

It is not difficult to imagine that leaking urine affects life in many contexts. Unfortunately, it is everyday life for far too many people in our society. According to the National Board of Health and Welfare, incontinence primarily affects older people, and both women and men are vulnerable. In Sweden, just over 530,000 people over the age of 65 have problems and almost 80 percent of all people in special housing have such urine leakage that they need to use incontinence aids. First-line treatment for women with incontinence is local estrogen and pelvic floor training. Surgery may also be considered if this treatment does not provide sufficient effect.

A new type of treatment for stress, urge and mixed incontinence is now on the market, High-Intensity Focused Electromagnetic (HIFEM®) treatment. This involves electromagnetic stimulation that causes contractions in the pelvic floor muscles. The treatment is not painful or invasive and the patient sits clothed in the treatment chair. In Sweden, HIFEM® is mainly available outside of traditional healthcare and is very expensive. It is also often given by unauthorized actors.

We are now planning a study whose purpose is to evaluate the effect of HIFEM® on women over 65 years of age with stress incontinence. A group of 100 women will be randomized to:

  1. Standard treatment, i.e. physiotherapy-led pelvic floor training
  2. As above with the addition of 10 treatments of 30 minutes with HIFEM®.

The evaluation will be carried out regarding leakage, need for incontinence aids and pelvic floor strength immediately and six months after the intervention. The women will also rate their incontinence symptoms, physical activity level, physical function and quality of life. A group will also be interviewed about their experiences of living with incontinence and the treatment. Before the study start, a case study will be performed in which 10 women will be included. They will receive 10 treatments and measure, with the same outcomes, the effects.

Alternative treatment methods are important to meet the care needs we have today but also in the future. If treatment with HIFEM® can be effective for women over 65, it could, in addition to reducing incontinence problems and the consequences of these problems, also lead to reduced costs for society regarding care and incontinence products, as well as reduced environmental impact.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

65 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Women aged 65-85 ears
  • Having daily stress incontinence requiring use of incontinence aids.
  • Living in ordinary housing without home (health-) care
  • Being physically active and can move independently both indoors and outdoors.
  • Being able to give independent informed consent in speech and writing
  • To understand and follow instructions in one of following languages Swedish, Arabic, French, and/or English

Exclusion criteria

  • -Ongoing coached pelvic floor training
  • Heart disease where treatment is contraindicated
  • Lung disease with chronic cough
  • Pacemaker, defibrillator, neurostimulator, medication pump, and implanted devices in the head or spinal cord
  • Electronic or metal implants in the abdomen, hips, or knees
  • Epilepsy
  • Ongoing cancer
  • Stoma or abdominal hernia
  • Ongoing treatment with anticoagulants such as warfarin, medicines affecting the bladder such as muscarin receptor antagonist, diuretics and local oestrogen which affect the bladder and urine production.
  • infection, fever, bleeding, or pain in the lower abdomen
  • Skin diseases or any skin sensitivity
  • BMI exceeding 30 kg/m2

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Arm A - Standard Pelvic Floor Training
Active Comparator group
Description:
* Active pelvic floor muscle training led by a physiotherapist, following standard practice. * Includes individualized advice and daily Kegel exercises to increase endurance and strength.
Treatment:
Other: Pelvic Floor exercises
Arm B - Pelvic Floor Training + HIFEM
Experimental group
Description:
* Same physiotherapist-led training as Arm A. * In addition: HIFEM treatment with Emsella chair. * 10 sessions, 30 min each, over 5 weeks (2 sessions per week). * Standardized stimulation delivered while seated, fully clothed, in a nurse-led clinic in Gothenburg.
Treatment:
Device: Pelvic floor training as described in point a above, with the addition of HIFEM.

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Monika Fagevik Olsén, Professor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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