Skip to content

Nitrous Oxide for Analgesia During Office Urethral Bulking

Nitrous Oxide for Analgesia During Office Urethral Bulking: a Randomized, Controlled Trial

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03847922
Enrollment
2
Registered
2019-02-20
Start date
2019-02-15
Completion date
2020-07-23
Last updated
2020-08-20

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Pain, Stress Incontinence, Female

Brief summary

This study is designed to determine primarily if there is a difference in perceived pain in patients receiving urethral bulking with calcium hydroxylapatite using local lidocaine versus local lidocaine plus nitrous oxide gas. Patients will be randomized to a control group (local lidocaine plus room air) or a intervention group (local lidocaine plus 50% nitrous oxide/50% oxygen inhaled mixture). Their pain will be assessed immediately after the procedure, and their recollection of pain will also be assessed at their 2 week post-procedure visit. There are other secondary outcome measures as well; please see outcome measures section for full description.

Interventions

DRUGNitrous Oxide + Oxygen Gas (Product)

Self-administered 50% nitrous oxide / 50% oxygen mixture will be given to the intervention group, starting just before the beginning of the urethral bulking procedure.

6mL of 2% lidocaine gel will be inserted and injected into the urethral canal approximately 10 minutes prior to the procedure for each participant regardless of group assignment.

Room air will be administered via the Pro-Nox machine to participants in the control group, starting just before the beginning of the urethral bulking procedure.

Sponsors

Baylor Research Institute
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Masking description

Patients are blinded to their group assignment (they are not aware of whether they are receiving nitrous oxide or room air)

Intervention model description

Randomized controlled trial with patients randomized 1:1 into two groups

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
18 Years to 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Female patients * greater than or equal to 18 years old * with demonstrable stress incontinence on supine stress test * undergoing calcium hydroxylapatite injection for urethral bulking for the first time * able to consent to the study and procedure

Exclusion criteria

* \< 18 years old * prior urethral bulking therapy * predominant urge incontinence symptoms * contraindications to nitrous oxide * pre-existing significant cardiopulmonary disease * hypotension defined as systolic blood pressure (BP) \< 90 or diastolic BP \<50 on initial BP in the office * chronic pain disorders (specifically fibromyalgia, chronic pelvic pain, sciatica or chronic low back pain, painful bladder syndrome) * chronic narcotic use (defined as taking a narcotic medication \>3 days per week during the past two weeks) * pregnancy * conditions of air trapping (bullous emphysema, bowel obstruction, pneumothorax, intracranial air, middle ear conditions, status post recent diving, recent eye surgery) * lidocaine allergy * neurologic diseases impairing pain perception.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in painupon enrollment and immediately after the procedurePain will be assessed both before the procedure upon enrollment immediately after the procedure using a 10cm visual analog scale (VAS), where patients will mark their pain level along the scale from no pain at 0cm to pain as bad as it possibly could be at 10cm; the change in pain score between the before and after procedure VASs (i.e. the baseline pain score subtracted from the post-procedure pain score) is the primary outcome

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Adverse eventsduring the procedureapneic episodes \> 15 seconds, patient lack of responsiveness, patient dissociative behavior, hypotension with blood pressure \< 90/50, bradycardia \< 50bpm, hypoxia with oxygen saturation \<92% on pulse oximetry, significant nausea or vomiting
Blood pressureduring the procedureWe will record blood pressure every 5 minutes during the procedure
Patient Global Impression of Improvement (PGI-I) score1-2 week post op visitScore on PGI-I at the patient's 1-2 week post-procedure visit. This score assesses who the patient feels their post-procedure condition is compared to prior to the procedure on a scale of 1-7, where 1 is very much better and 7 is very much worse.
Change in Incontinence Severity Index (ISI) scoreat enrollment and then again at the patient's 1-2 week post-procedure visit.A change in the patient's ISI score, measured prior to procedure and then again at the 1-2 week post-procedure visit. ISI score measures severity of incontinence symptoms on a scale of 0 to 12, where 0 is no symptoms and 12 is maximal incontinence symptoms. We will calculate the change in score by subtracting the post-procedure score at 1-2 weeks from the baseline score.
Episodes of hypoxiaduring the procedureWe will record any oxygen saturation \< 92% during the procedure
Episodes of tachycardiaduring the procedureWe will record episodes of heart rate \> 100bpm during the procedure
Procedure timeIntra-procedureTime from the initial insertion of the cystoscope (for the injection of calcium hydroxylapatite) to final removal of the cystoscope
Change in Urogenital Distress Inventory (UDI-6) scoreat enrollment and then again at the patient's 1-2 week post-procedure visit.A change in the patient's UDI-6 score, measured prior to procedure and then again at the 1-2 week post-procedure visit. UDI-6 is a measure of the severity of urinary symptoms the patient experiences, with minimum score of 0 (indicating no bother from urinary symptoms) and maximum score of 100 (indicating maximum bother from urinary symptoms). We will be assessing the change in this score from baseline, by subtracting the post-procedure score at 1-2 weeks from the baseline score.
Episodes of bradycardiaduring the procedureWe will record any episodes of heart rate \< 60bpm during the procedure
Patient's suspected group assignment10 minutes after the procedure10 minutes after the procedure, the patients will be asked to which treatment arm they suspected they were allocated
Recollection of change in pain10 minutes after the procedureRecollection of pain measured by a 10cm visual analog scale (VAS) completed 10 minutes after the procedure; this will be compared to the baseline pain score on VAS from prior to the procedure, again to determine the patient's perceived change in pain during the procedure. The VAS used has patients mark their pain level along the scale from no pain at 0cm to pain as bad as it possibly could be at 10cm. The score on the VAS at baseline is subtracted from the score on the VAS at 10 minutes to get the change in pain as the patient remembered it.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026