Interstitial Cystitis: Elucidation of the Psychophysiologic and Autonomic Characteristics (ICEPAC) Study

Sponsor
Case Western Reserve University (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT01616992
Collaborator
(none)
200
2
63
100
1.6

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

Interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome (IC/PBS) causes severe bladder pain and extensive disability in a large group of women int he prime of their productive lives. Extensive study of the bladder itself has uncovered many abnormalities, but the investigators do not know if these are the cause or result of the disorder. None of these has led to any real long-term progress in treatment, so far. The investigators have found that other autonomic disorders often occur in both the patients themselves and in the family members of patients with IC/PBS. The investigators therefore propose to determine whether the main abnormality in IC/PBS actually lies in the autonomic nervous system, rather than the bladder. The investigators will do this through careful measurements of autonomic function and sensation in patients who have IC/PBS, both at rest, and under controlled psychological stress. The investigators will compare their measurements to patients with myofascial pelvic pain, to know which abnormalities are truly linked to IC/PBS, and which simply reflect the presence of pelvic pain.

Detailed Description

The investigators primary hypothesis is that IC/PBS is a member of a larger family of disorders sharing aberrant central autonomic and sensory response to stress, pain or threat. These disorders appear to share a common vulnerability that seems to be conferred during development, and symptoms of these disorders usually are first manifested in response to an environmental trigger. This proposal aims to compare the neural, psychological, and endocrine phenotypes that characterize patients with IC/PBS with those of patients suffering myofascial pelvic pain (MPP) syndrome, an chronic pelvic pain distinct from IC/PBS, age-matched, healthy controls, and first degree relatives. These studies are designed to identify which levels of the neuraxis are impaired, both in the basal state, and in response to a well-characterized psychosocial stressor.

Aim 1: To differentiate the specific baseline neurophysiological abnormalities that occur in

IC/PBS from those present in patients with MPP and healthy subjects, specifically:

1a: Bladder and pelvic floor afferent and efferent urogynecological function: (1) voiding diaries (efferent) modified to include void-state related numeric rating scales for pain (afferent); Uroflow measurements (efferent), and a double-blind placebo-controlled evaluation of the diagnostic lidocaine instillation test (afferent) with impact on voiding function (efferent); (2) semi-quantitative evaluation of pelvic floor function and identification of myofascial trigger points (efferent), including inter-observer validation of a standardized semi-quantitative examination (afferent); (3) quantitative Q-tip test for vulvodynia (afferent) (4) evaluation of dysmenorrhea (afferent) and menstrual function (efferent).

1b: somatic afferent and autonomic efferent neural function, specifically: (1) global screen for autonomic and neurological abnormalities through the established Small Fiber Score Instrument (SFIBS) questionnaire and structured neurological examination (afferent and efferent); (2) specific evaluation of sacral and lumbar nerve root function through a focused neurological examination (afferent and efferent); (3) parasympathetic cardiac function through the cardiac response to deep breathing (efferent); (4) sympathetic cardiac and vasomotor functions through the cardiovascular responses to the Valsalva maneuver and to an upright tilt table test (efferent); (5) sudomotor sympathetic function through the quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test (QSART) that evaluates post-ganglionic function (specifically abnormal in autonomic neuropathies) and through a thermoregulatory sweat test (efferent).

  1. c: gastrointestinal afferent and efferent function, specifically upper bowel motility with established methods: (1) early satiety & gastric compliance by water load test (afferent). (2) gastric electrical activity through electrogastrography (efferent).

Aim 2: To determine the specific developmental, psychiatric, pain, autonomic, and stress response characteristics common to IC/PBS and their family members, that differ from MPP and healthy subjects through:

  1. a: Stress and trauma history in early childhood and adulthood.

2b: Psychiatric screening and psychometric quantitation of psychological symptoms, pain and function.

2c: Quantitation of associated co-morbid autonomic disorders through the ODYSA questionnaire.

2d: Salivary cortisol levels immediately prior to autonomic testing (anticipatory stress) and after a period of relaxation once the test is finished, in conjunction with a stress self-assessment inventory.

2e: Performance of the Trier test on a subset of patients and controls, with measurement of autonomic cardiovascular parameters, body temperature, catecholamine concentrations (norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine) and endocrine parameters: ACTH and adrenocortical hormones.

Study Design

Study Type:
Observational
Actual Enrollment :
200 participants
Observational Model:
Case-Control
Time Perspective:
Prospective
Official Title:
Interstitial Cystitis: Elucidation of the Psychophysiologic and Autonomic
Study Start Date :
Sep 1, 2009
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Dec 1, 2014
Actual Study Completion Date :
Dec 1, 2014

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Interstitial Cystitis

Drug: Bupivacaine
20 ML dose of 0.75% Bupivacaine Instillation (into bladder) 1 time during second study visit.

Myofascial Pelvic Pain

Drug: Bupivacaine
20 ML dose of 0.75% Bupivacaine Instillation (into bladder) 1 time during second study visit.

Healthy

First Degree Relative

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Interstitial Cystitis [1 month]

    Clinical Assessment

  2. Myofascial Pelvic Pain [1 Month]

    Clinical Assessment

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Depression Symptoms [1 Month]

    Questionnaire Assessment of Symptoms

  2. Stress Symptoms [1 month]

    Questionnaire Assessment

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years to 80 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
Female
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Yes

General exclusion criteria for all IC/PBS and MPP patients, their siblings, and normal subjects will include presence of:

  1. Currently attempting to become pregnant, pregnant (pregnancy test will be required) or breast feeding

  2. Hematuria (? this can occur in IC) or infection on urinalysis

  3. Recurrent urinary tract infections (> 3 culture documented episodes within the previous 12 months)

  4. Pelvic or bladder neoplasm or infection

  5. Inflammatory arthritis, connective tissue or auto-immune disorder

  6. Evidence of unstable medical disorder, such as kidney (rising creatinine, or end-stage renal failure) or liver impairment (rising AST or ALT, or end-stage with coagulopathy), poorly controlled significant cardiovascular (CHF), respiratory, endocrine (diabetes - A1c > 9 - or untreated thyroid dysfunction) or uncontrolled psychiatric illness (such as untreated depression, psychosis, etc.).

  7. Neuropathy, central nervous system disorder (e.g., Parkinson's Disease, Alzheimer's, MS, stroke, etc)

  8. Treatment with a drug or medical device within the previous 30 days that has not received regulatory approval

  9. Use of hormones (except insulin, thyroid replacement or oral contraceptives, which will be carefully documented)

  10. Regular use of opiods

  11. Allergy to lidocaine

  12. Inability to stop use of autonomically active or pro-kinetic (gastrointestinal motility modifying) agents for a minimum of 5 half-lives prior to testing

  13. Current substance abuse or > 10 alcoholic beverages per week

  14. Any major surgical intervention with general anesthesia in the last 90 days

  15. Any on-going or pending medical, health or disability related litigation, or current pursuit of disability

  16. Any condition that in the judgment of the investigator and the internal advisory panel would interfere with the patient's ability to provide informed consent, comply with study instructions, place the patient at increased risk, or which would clearly confound the interpretation of the study results (specific reason will be documented) 17.Investigators, study staff and their immediate families 18.Inability to speak English

  1. Previously completed or withdrawn from this study

Normal controls and siblings: Aged-matched healthy female subjects will be recruited by nomination by patients and advertisement. A history and physical will be obtained by a physician, and controls will be required to have no history, symptoms or signs of (exclusion criteria):

  1. FM or CFS (unexplained fatigue for a period of 6 months or more)

  2. IC/PBS, MPP or chronic pelvic discomfort or chronic pain disorder of any type.

  3. One of the other ODYSA dysautonomias

IC/PBS Patients - The diagnosis of IC/PBS will be made using most current NIDDK criteria.

Exclusion criteria:
  1. Intravesical therapy or bladder hydrodistention within the previous 90 days

  2. Initiation of pentosan polysulfate sodium (Elmiron) within the previous 90 days

  3. Previous augmentation cystoplasty, cystectomy or cytolysis, neurectomy (i.e., hypogastric nerve plexus ablation) or implanted neural stimulator which is functionally "on", in active use, or unable to be turned functionally off throughout the study period.

MPP Patients - Inclusion Criteria

  1. CPP > 3 months duration, with pain ranked > 3/10 by oral analog scale

  2. Presence of 1 or more palpable trigger points on transvaginal and/or transrectal examination of the pelvic floor, which reproduces the pain for which they are seeking medical care.

Exclusion criteria:
  1. Pelvic surgery within the last 12 months

  2. Pelvic injection with the last 90 days

  3. Presence of IC/PBS by the current NIDDK criteria

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Summa Health System Akron Ohio United States 44304
2 University Hospitals Case Medical Center Cleveland Ohio United States 44106

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Case Western Reserve University

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Thomas C Chelimsky, MD, Medical College of Wisconsin
  • Principal Investigator: Jeffrey Janata, PhD, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Thomas Chelimsky, Professor of Neurology, Case Western Reserve University
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT01616992
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • R01DK083538
First Posted:
Jun 12, 2012
Last Update Posted:
Feb 4, 2015
Last Verified:
Feb 1, 2015
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Feb 4, 2015