Investigation of Brain Mechanisms Involved in Urgency Urinary Incontinence
Sponsor: Becky Clarkson
A observational or N/A phase clinical study on Urgency Urinary Incontinence, this trial is completed. The trial is conducted by Becky Clarkson and has accumulated 16 data snapshots since 2020. Longitudinal tracking of this trial contributes to a broader understanding of treatment development timelines.
Study Description(click to expand)Urgency urinary incontinence (UUI) costs the US $83 billion/year, owing in large part to its increased prevalence with age, particularly in women: 9% of those over age 18 and 36% of those over age 65. UUI also impairs quality of life, social interaction, and independence; contributes to functional decline; and increases risk for falls, hip fractures, UTIs, urosepsis, anxiety, depression, and institutionalization.The cause of UUI is unknown. Its urgency and leakage are usually ascribed to detrusor overactivity (DO, involuntary detrusor contraction), suggesting that the cause is intrinsic to the bladder even though DO is not always confirmed on testing. Because of this assumption, most therapies target the bladder albeit with only moderate success: e.g., anticholinergics reduce incontinence episodes but their benefit and tolerability (especially for older adults) are sufficiently low that 75% of patients discontinue them within a year. By contrast, therapies such as biofeedback-assisted pelvic muscle therapy (BFB) tackle behaviors. Moreover, the use of biofeedback to retrain the brain shows that the central control mechanism can be targeted and improved. Thus, the present proposal is designed to further elucidate this mechanism, thereby paving the way for discovery of new and more effective ways to control UUI. These could transform...
Urgency urinary incontinence (UUI) costs the US $83 billion/year, owing in large part to its increased prevalence with age, particularly in women: 9% of those over age 18 and 36% of those over age 65. UUI also impairs quality of life, social interaction, and independence; contributes to functional decline; and increases risk for falls, hip fractures, UTIs, urosepsis, anxiety, depression, and institutionalization.The cause of UUI is unknown. Its urgency and leakage are usually ascribed to detrusor overactivity (DO, involuntary detrusor contraction), suggesting that the cause is intrinsic to the bladder even though DO is not always confirmed on testing. Because of this assumption, most therapies target the bladder albeit with only moderate success: e.g., anticholinergics reduce incontinence episodes but their benefit and tolerability (especially for older adults) are sufficiently low that 75% of patients discontinue them within a year. By contrast, therapies such as biofeedback-assisted pelvic muscle therapy (BFB) tackle behaviors. Moreover, the use of biofeedback to retrain the brain shows that the central control mechanism can be targeted and improved. Thus, the present proposal is designed to further elucidate this mechanism, thereby paving the way for discovery of new and more effective ways to control UUI. These could transform current treatment and either complement or supplant current therapy.
Explanation for change in study outcomes: This study was designed as a mechanistic study, using the study drug as a probe, to develop a more comprehensive qualitative model of the brain's role in bladder control. We present the primary outcome of response to drug/placebo as a cross-over drug study which allows evaluation of the study drug in a clinical population, as reported in our IRB approval document STUDY19090167. The synthesis of the groups of responders and non-responders to drug or placebo is crucial to allow in depth analysis of changes in brain structure and function which will provide insight into how the brain controls the bladder. However, such analysis is necessarily qualitative, complex and challenging to convey in a context-free numerical format, such as this site. Thus, the initially entered primary outcomes of brain structure and function will be reported with full context in upcoming manuscripts.
Status Flow
Change History
16 versions recorded-
Apr 28, 2026 — Present [daily]
Completed
Phase: PHASE4 → None
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Dec 2025 — Apr 2026 [monthly]
Completed PHASE4
Status: Recruiting → Completed
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May 2025 — Dec 2025 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Jan 2025 — May 2025 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Sep 2024 — Jan 2025 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
▶ Show 11 earlier versions
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Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Mar 2024 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Feb 2023 — Mar 2024 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Jan 2023 — Feb 2023 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Sep 2022 — Jan 2023 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Sep 2021 — Sep 2022 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Jan 2021 — Sep 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Jul 2020 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
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Apr 2020 — Jul 2020 [monthly]
Recruiting PHASE4
Status: Not Yet Recruiting → Recruiting
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Mar 2020 — Apr 2020 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting PHASE4
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Feb 2020 — Mar 2020 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting PHASE4
First recorded
Eligibility Summary
This is a randomized double-blind crossover trial of trospium and placebo in women with urgency urinary incontinence, with evaluation (history, physical, incontinence evaluation and brain MRI) at baseline, and after each course of therapy. The investigators will evaluate functional brain changes in relation to bladder improvement in order to improve our knowledge of the brain's role in the continence mechanism.
Contact Information
- Becky Clarkson
- National Institute on Aging (NIA)
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .