1. Three‐month primary efficacy data for the SUCCESS Trial; a phase III, multi‐center, prospective, randomized, controlled study treating female stress urinary incontinence with the vesair intravesical balloon
- Author
-
Jeffrey A. Snyder, Susan Kalota, Karny Jacoby, Kaiser Robertson, Kevin Cline, Randall Kahan, Lonny Green, Kurt A. McCammon, Eric S. Rovner, Jack M. Zuckerman, and Charles R. Rardin
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Urinary Incontinence, Stress ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Urinary incontinence ,Placebo ,Balloon ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Quality of life ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Single-Blind Method ,Prospective Studies ,Adverse effect ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Urinary retention ,Equipment Design ,Balloon Occlusion ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Tolerability ,Quality of Life ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Aims The SUCCESS trial is a phase III study of the Vesair® balloon in the United States for female stress urinary incontinence (SUI). The purpose of this manuscript is to present the 3 month primary efficacy and tolerability outcome data. Methods The SUCCESS trial is a multi-center, prospective, single blind, randomized, sham-controlled study. Subjects were randomized on a 2.33:1 basis to either Vesair balloon placement or placebo. The primary efficacy endpoint was a composite of both a >50% reduction from baseline on 1 h provocative pad weight test and a ≥10-point improvement in symptoms on the Incontinence Quality of Life Survey (I-QOL) questionnaire assessed at the 3 month study visit. Results A total of 221 subjects were randomized, including 157 treatment arm subjects and 64 controls. The 3 month composite primary efficacy endpoint was achieved in 42.1% of treatment group subjects compared with 28.1% of controls on intention-to-treat analysis (p = 0.046). Treatment arm subjects were significantly more likely to report at least a 50% reduction in incontinence frequency on 7-day voiding diary (55.2% vs 32.3%, P = 0.002, ITT) and more commonly reported their incontinence was improved on Patient Global Impression of Improvement in Incontinence (PGI-I) at 3 months compared with controls (58.0% vs 37.7%, P = 0.007, ITT). No device- or procedure-related serious adverse events nor unanticipated adverse events were reported and no cases of urinary retention were observed. All adverse events fully resolved following balloon removal. Conclusions In this phase three trial, the Vesair intravesical balloon achieved 3 month primary and secondary endpoints both objectively and subjectively.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF