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Intraureteral Lidocaine for Post-Ureteroscopy Pain

Q

Queen's University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Ureteral Calculi
Renal Calculi

Treatments

Drug: Lidocaine
Drug: Saline

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01450566
Lidocaine Beiko

Details and patient eligibility

About

Ureteroscopy (URS) is minimally invasive procedure for management of renal stones. URS is often involves concomitant of an indwelling ureteral stents. Placements of these stents include pain, bladder irritability, infection, migration, encrustation and stones.

Pain is one of most significant problem of ureteral stents. There are no satisfactory measures to deal with this problem. A novel approach to manage the pain is to load a drug onto ureteral stent and deliver the drug into the urinary tract at controlled release rate.

Lidocaine has been proven to be effective for management of the pain associated with interstitial cystitis. This agent has the potential for management of post-URS pain.

Full description

Patients treated with ureteroscopy (URS) for ureteral or renal calculi requiring a ureteral stent at time of URS will be randomized to receive intraureteral instillation of alkalinized lidocaine hydrochloride (study group) or normal saline (control group) immediately following the procedure to assess safety and effectiveness in alleviating pain and stent symptoms. Thousands of removable stents are placed in patients' ureters (tubes connecting kidney and bladder) each year in Canada. These plastic stents allow the kidney to drain when there is swelling after kidney stone surgery or if they are otherwise obstructed. Studies report that more than 80% of patients have painful symptoms from indwelling ureteral stents. This study will attempt to show that local anesthetic injected directly into the ureter before stent placement will reduce stent pain. Recent studies have shown infusing lidocaine with bicarbonate (a local anesthetic) into painful bladders is safe, and patients' symptoms improve dramatically. This result inspired the innovative idea that injecting a similar solution into the kidney and ureter (which have the same lining as the bladder) will numb the area sufficiently to decrease stent related pain.

The study will randomly select half of the patients to receive an injection of non-irritating salt water (placebo), and half an injection of pH buffered lidocaine before the stent is placed. Both patients and physicians will be blinded to the assignment of treatment or placebo. The investigators will then compare pain scores post operatively.

If successful, future researchers may use lidocaine in drug eluding stents to further ameliorate pain.

Enrollment

48 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient undergoing URS for treatment of a urinary calculus who requires placement of ureteral stent on a string
  • Able to undergo a general anaesthetic
  • At least 18 years old
  • Willing and able to complete patient symptom questionnaires

Exclusion criteria

  • Solitary Kidney
  • Renal failure
  • Anatomic bladder or ureteral abnormality
  • Uncorrected coagulopathy
  • Previous cystectomy or urinary diversion
  • Neurogenic bladder
  • Interstitial cystitis
  • Transplanted kidney
  • Pregnancy
  • Requires an indwelling catheter
  • Recurrent urinary tract infections
  • Requires an indwelling stent
  • Pelvic kidney
  • Requires bilateral treatment/stents
  • Previous bladder or ureteral reconstructive surgery
  • Ureteral perforation during procedure
  • Ureteral stenting, within one month of URS
  • Known sensitivity to lidocaine
  • Febrile at time of randomization or treatment
  • Requires spinal anaesthetic

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

48 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Lidocaine
Experimental group
Description:
Use of lidocaine
Treatment:
Drug: Lidocaine
No lidocaine
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
No lidocaine/standard of care
Treatment:
Drug: Saline

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Sylvia Robb, RN, CCRP; Joseph A Downey, MSc, CCRP

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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