grant

Fecal Incontinence Treatment Study (FIT Study)

Organization MAYO CLINIC ROCHESTERLocation ROCHESTER, UNITED STATESPosted 18 Sept 2018Deadline 31 May 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY202321+ years oldActive Follow-upAdmissionAdmission activityAdultAdult HumanAdverse ExperienceAdverse eventAgreementAlgorithmsAnalAnal IncontinenceAnal SphincterAnusAnxietyBeliefBiofeedbackBowel incontinenceCTCAECell LocomotionCell MigrationCell MovementCellular MigrationCellular MotilityCharacteristicsClinicClinicalClinical ResearchClinical StudyColon and Rectal SurgeryColorectal SurgeryCombined Modality TherapyCommon Terminology Criteria for Adverse EventsCommon Toxicity CriteriaCost AnalysesCost AnalysisCost Effectiveness AnalysisData Coordinating CenterData Coordination CenterDiabetes MellitusDigestive DiseasesDigestive System DiseasesDigestive System DisordersEducational workshopElectric StimulationElectrical StimulationEnrollmentEsthesiaEvoked PotentialsExpectancyFecal IncontinenceFecesFrequenciesGI tract disorderGeographic AreaGeographic LocationsGeographic RegionGeographical LocationHistoryHospital AdmissionHospitalizationInfectionInjectionsInterventionIntervention StrategiesKidney DiseasesKnowledgeLiquid substanceMagnetismMeasuresMedicalMedical Care CostsMental DepressionMethodsMotilityMultimodal TherapyMultimodal TreatmentNIH Program AnnouncementsNephropathyNerve ConductionNeural ConductionNursing HomesOutcomeOutcome MeasureParticipantPathway interactionsPatientsPelvic FloorPelvic PainPelvic floor structurePersonsPhonePhysiologicPhysiologicalPhysiologyPoliciesPragmatic clinical trialPrediction of Response to TherapyPredictive FactorPrincipal InvestigatorProgram AnnouncementQALYQOLQuality of lifeQuality-Adjusted Life ExpectancyQuality-Adjusted Life YearsQuestionnairesRandomizedRandomized, Controlled TrialsRecommendationRecording of previous eventsRectumRenal DiseaseReportingResearchSacral nerveSafetySelf EfficacySensationSeveritiesSiteSolidSphincterTelephoneTimeUniversitiesWorkshopactive followupadulthoodalternative treatmentassess costcell motilityclinical research siteclinical sitecohortcolon and rectum surgerycombination therapycombined modality treatmentcombined treatmentcomparable efficacycomparative cost effectivenesscomparative efficacycompare costcompare cost effectivenesscompare effectivenesscompare efficacycompare treatmentconferenceconventioncostcost assessmentcost comparisoncost effectivenesscost efficient analysiscost estimatecost estimationcost evaluationcost per QALYcost per quality-adjusted life yearcost-effective analysisdata management and coordinating centerdata management centerdepressiondesigndesigningdetermine efficacydiabetesdigestive disorderdigestive tract diseaseefficacy analysisefficacy assessmentefficacy determinationefficacy evaluationefficacy examinationelectrostimulationenrollevaluate costevaluate efficacyexamine costexamine efficacyexperiencefluidfollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowupgastrointestinal tract diseasegastrointestinal tract disordergeographic sitehistoriesimprovedinclusion criteriainterventional strategykidney disorderliquidmagneticmeasurable outcomemedical costsmulti-modal therapymulti-modal treatmentneural stimulationneurophysiologicalneurophysiologynursing homeoutcome measurementpathwaypredict responsivenesspredict therapeutic responsepredict therapy responsepredict treatment responseprematureprematuritypressureprogramspsychological distresspsychological outcomespsychosocialrandomisationrandomizationrandomized control trialrandomly assignedrecruitrectalrenal disorderresponseresponse to therapyresponse to treatmentresponsiveness predictionsafety assessmentsecondary analysissecondary outcomesexsphincter ani muscle structurestoolsummitsymposiasymposiumtherapeutic responsetherapy predictiontherapy responderstherapy responsetreatment comparisontreatment grouptreatment predictiontreatment responderstreatment responsetreatment response predictiontreatment siteultrasoundwillingness
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

ABSTRACT
This is an initial application for a U01 in response to PAR-15-067. This program announcement grew out of an

NIDDK Workshop held in 2013 to identify pathways for promoting research on fecal incontinence (FI).

Conference attendees identified gaps in knowledge and the best approaches to progress, and all identified

Biofeedback (BIO), Sacral Neural Stimulation (SNS), and Injections of bulking agents (INJ) in the perianal

space as treatments supported by controlled trials, but with no clear indication of which is most effective,

safest, and least costly. Outcome measures have been variable, and inclusion criteria have also differed. The

recommendation was to compare all 3 using the same paradigm. Aims: (1) Compare all 3 treatments on the

basis of efficacy, safety, and cost, as well as secondary outcome measures. (2) Identify physiological, clinical,

and psychosocial predictors of who will respond to each treatment. (3) Allow patients who do not respond to

the randomly assigned treatment to select a second treatment at 3 months. (4) Compare treatment

combinations to see which appears best (uncontrolled). (5) Assess the effects of enhanced Medical

Management (MM) on efficacy, safety, and cost (uncontrolled). (6) Compare the cost-effectiveness of BIO,

SNS, and INJ for FI throughout the two years. Methods: Select 567 patients appropriate to all treatments

including >2 per week solid or liquid FI. A treatment responder is someone with >75% reduction in FI

frequency. Primary assessment is 3 months after the beginning of randomized treatment. If patients are

responders, they will continue to be studied for 24 months, but if they fail to respond they will be offered

alternative treatment and followed. Secondary outcomes include the rate of responding with a 50% decrease in

FI, continence, changes on the Bristol Stool Severity scale, FI Quality of Life, and validated severity scales (FI

Severity Scale, St. Mark’s FI Severity Scale). Psychological outcomes include the PROMIS Anxiety-7,

Depression-8, and Self-Efficacy scales. Costs effectiveness analysis will be based on Quality Adjusted Life

Years. Moderators will include (1) physiological assessments (anal ultrasound, anorectal motility, and magnetic

evoked potentials); (2) a priori beliefs in treatments (Credibility/Expectancy Questionnaire), quality of life

(general and FI specific), sex, and type of FI (passive, urge). The 4 clinical site principal investigators (PIs) are

Adil Bharucha (Mayo Clinic), Satish Rao (University of Augusta in Georgia), Ann Lowry (Colon and Rectal

Surgery in Minneapolis), and William Whitehead (Chapel Hill, NC) – all senior PIs. The PI of the data

coordinating center (DCC) is Marie Gantz, also an experienced PI. This is a collaborative agreement with

NIDDK, and Frank Hamilton will participate in program management. A successful outcome will guide

treatment algorithms and reimbursement policies.

Grant Number: 7U01DK115575-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: ADIL BHARUCHA

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →