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Obstruction of Malignancy: Percutaneous Renal vs Endoscopic Stent

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The University of Chicago

Status and phase

Withdrawn
Early Phase 1

Conditions

Urinary Obstruction
Urinary Dysfunction
Ureter Obstruction
Ureter Injury
Cancer
Malignancy

Treatments

Device: Ureteral Stent
Device: Percutaneous Nephrostomy Tube Placement

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05640115
IRB22-0835

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research study will compare two procedures commonly used to treat urinary obstruction due to cancer. Sometimes cancer blocks one or both ureters (narrow tubes in the body that carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder). When these ureters become blocked, the body can no longer properly drain urine. This blocking of the ureters is called urinary obstruction, which can lead to kidney problems, infection, and pain. Treatment options for urinary obstruction include ureteral stent placement and percutaneous nephrostomy tube placement. Both treatment options require a doctor to place soft tubes (like a catheter) inside the body to help the ureters properly drain urine. These two treatment options have different success rates, risks, and effects on quality of life. By doing this study, researchers hope to learn which treatment option is best for individuals who develop urinary obstruction because of cancer. Participation in this research will last about 3 months.

Full description

This research study will compare two procedures commonly used to treat urinary obstruction due to cancer. Sometimes cancer blocks one or both ureters (narrow tubes in the body that carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder). When these ureters become blocked, the body can no longer properly drain urine. This blocking of the ureters is called urinary obstruction, which can lead to kidney problems, infection, and pain.

Treatment options for urinary obstruction include ureteral stent placement and percutaneous nephrostomy tube placement. Both treatment options require a doctor to place soft tubes inside the body to help the ureters properly drain urine. A ureteral stent is an internal drainage tube allowing urine to drain from your kidney down to your bladder. The percutaneous nephrostomy tube is a tube that comes out your back that drains urine into a bag. These two treatment options have different success rates, risks, and effects on quality of life. By doing this study, researchers hope to learn which treatment option is best for individuals who develop urinary obstruction due to cancer. Participation in this research will last about 3 months.

If you agree to participate:

  • The study doctor will not pick which one of the two treatments described above you will receive. We will use a computer to place you in one of the two study groups. The group the computer picks is by chance, like a flip of a coin. This is also called "randomization." You will have an equal chance of being in either group.
  • You will receive either a retrograde ureteral stent or a percutaneous nephrostomy tube. A member of the research team will tell you which of the two treatments you will get, after the selection has been made.

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patients must have unilateral or bilateral hydronephrosis secondary to extrinsic compression by malignancy on cross sectional imaging.
  • Age ≥18 years.
  • Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Anticoagulation that cannot be safely reversed in the peri-procedural time period.
  • History of severe allergy to contrast media.
  • Prior stent or nephrostomy in previous 6 months.
  • Urethral or ureteric stricture disease.
  • Lower urinary tract structural abnormalities or urinary diversion precluding retrograde ureteral stent placement.
  • On blood pressure support or clinically unstable.
  • Pregnant women are excluded from this study because the radiation from either procedure is known to have the potential for teratogenic or abortifacient effects.
  • Previous renal transplant.
  • Dialysis

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Group A (Ureteral Stenting)
Experimental group
Description:
Group A: Participants in this group will receive a standard of care ureteral stenting performed by a urologist.
Treatment:
Device: Ureteral Stent
Group B (Percutaneous Nephrostomy)
Experimental group
Description:
Participants in this group will receive a standard of care percutaneous nephrostomy tube placement performed by an interventional radiologist.
Treatment:
Device: Percutaneous Nephrostomy Tube Placement

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

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