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The investigators will recruit up to 20 volunteers with chronic, supra-sacral SCI. Following screening, eligible participants will enter 'Phase I', they will complete baseline outcome measures and then have the epidural spinal cord stimulator (eSCS) implanted with either percutaneous or paddle electrodes. Preoperative and intraoperative testing will determine exact location of electrodes.
Mapping and optimisation of stimulation parameters will be performed simultaneously with urodynamic investigations of bladder function, and anorectal physiology investigations of bowel function. The acute effects of eSCS to suppress bladder overactivity, facilitate voiding, prevent unwanted reflex sphincter activity, and pelvic floor function will guide development of eSCS programmes for use at home.
In 'Phase II', participants will use eSCS at home for 12-weeks. Participants will also be taught how to perform bladder and pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) in combination with eSCS.
Outcome measures assessing bladder, bowel, sexual function, quality of life, motor function and spasticity will be captured prior to and following the 12-week intervention, and at 3 and 6 month follow up.
Full description
Screening:
Following confirmation that participants meet the eligibility criteria, they will undergo extensive screening, to confirm their suitability for eSCS implantation. They will meet with multidisciplinary team members, to ensure they are fully educated about the potential risks, and to manage their expectations of outcomes. They will undergo a urodynamics assessment, following standard protocol. If they have neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO), and are responsive to dorsal genital nerve stimulation to supress NDO they will progress to have an MRI.
Phase I:
Baseline measurements will be completed as outlined in 'outcome measures'. Participants will undergo implantation of a Senza implantable pulse generator (Nevro Corp., CA, USA), which is MRI-conditional and multi-programmable, with Surpass Surgical or Percutaneous leads (Nevro Corp., CA, USA). The device will be implanted under the skin either at the abdomen, superior to iliac crest, or buttocks.
Participants will attend three mapping sessions to determine effective stimulation sites and parameters for the lower limbs, bladder, bowel and pelvic floor muscles. An optional cardiovascular mapping session will also be offered. The mapping sessions will generate several eSCS programmes for participants to use at home, which target specific effects: supression of NDO, facilitation of voiding, bowel management, and pelvic floor muscle activation.
Participants will have a pelvic floor examination, and be taught a pelvic floor muscle training programme to complete at home. They will be educated on how to use the above programmes as part of their daily routine.
Phase II:
For the following 12-weeks participants will use their eSCS programmes and complete daily PFMT. At week 3, 6 and 9, they will be invited to attend a face to face pelvic floor clinic, to review their programme and progress their exercises as indicated. Participants will be called once a week by a member of the research team to check how the participant is managing with their device/programmes, identify any issues, and have any questions answered. They will be asked to complete a 3-day bladder diary and up to 14-day bowel diary during this period.
Participants will repeat baseline measures (with urodynamics, anorectal physiology and global perception of improvement measure) at the end of the 12-week home trial.
Participants will be offered for their eSCS device to be explanted or they can continue with this in situ. They will have time to consider this and discuss this with the clinical care team and researchers. Irrespective of decision, with participants consent, the investigators will continue to follow them up 3, and 6 months later.
If participants keep the SCS device following the 12-week home trial, the repeat bladder and bowel diary assessments will be captured during a period of 2-weeks without stimulation. They will then be able to proceed with using this device as normal.
All participants will be invited to take part in an interview to discuss their participation in the trial, and their decision to either keep or remove the SCS device. This will be audio recorded which will be destroyed once transformed into a written script.
Participants will return to RNOH Stanmore to complete re-assessment of outcomes at 3 and 6 months.
At the end of the study, participants will be offered for their eSCS device to be explanted or they can continue with this in situ, with ongoing support from The London Spinal Cord Injury Centre team/service.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Lynsey Duffell, PhD; Hannah Houliston, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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