Abstract
Aim
To investigate the clinical efficacy of acotiamide hydrochloride hydrate in patients with detrusor underactivity.
Methods
We measured the post-void residual urinary volume in 19 patients with underactive bladders. All these patients had been under treatment with distigmine bromide and were prescribed acotiamide hydrochloride hydrate at a dose of 100 mg three times daily for 2 weeks.
Results
Compared with the post-void residual urinary volume value at baseline (161.4±90.0 mL) a statistically significant reduction was observed at the end of treatment (116.3±63.1 mL) (P=0.006). The drug was generally well tolerated by the majority of patients.
Conclusion
Maybe, acotiamide hydrochloride hydrate showed clinical efficacy in patients with underactive bladders and may, therefore, be used alternatively in patients who do not respond sufficiently to distigmine bromide.
Keywords: acotiamide hydrochloride hydrate, distigmine bromide, underactive bladder, detrusor underactive
Introduction
Detrusor underactivity (DU) is defined as a contraction of reduced strength and/or duration, resulting in prolonged bladder emptying and/or failure to achieve complete bladder emptying within a usual time span.1 Some of the established causes of DU are neurogenic or myogenic in nature or due to aging and medication side effects.2 In humans, distigmine bromide increases the urinary flow rate through improved detrusor contractility in patients with DU.3 But this drug may cause a cholinergic crisis. As this adverse event may be lethal, we hesitate using this drug.
AChE inhibitors are also used for the treatment of myasthenia gravis as acetylcholine is required for the contraction of muscle fibers.4 Acotiamide appears to exert an antagonistic effect on muscarinic M1, M2, and M3 receptors and thereby inhibit the negative feedback system by blocking muscarinic auto receptors that regulate acetyl-choline release.5,6 So, we think this drug might be effective in patients with DU.
Methods
Subjects
This was an open, non-randomized study. The protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee of Sakai-Onshinkai Hospital. Informed consent was obtained from patients before the start of the study. The study was not placebo controlled, however, a placebo effect could not be entirely excluded.
The subjects of the present study were patients with clinical DU who received outpatient treatment at the Department of Urology of Sakai-Onshinkai Hospital between July 2013 and March 2014. The patients underwent gastrointestinal fiberscopy to rule out the possibility of gastric cancer.
Medication
The recommended dosage of acotiamide is 100 mg taken three times daily prior to a meal.
Study design
The medication was switched from distigmine bromide to acotiamide, and post-void residual (PVR) urinary volume at 2 weeks after switching was compared with baseline value in each patient.
Statistical analysis
The mean ± standard deviation was calculated. A paired Student’s t-test was used to analyze the difference in PVR urinary volume value. Statistical significance was set at P,0.05.
Results
Nineteen patients consented to participate in the study and have their PVR urinary volume measured before and after acotiamide treatment (Table 1). The mean age of the patients was 75.7 years (range: 61–89). There were eleven men and eight women. According to symptoms (slow stream, hesitancy, straining, etc), 16 had a neurogenic bladder (NgB), two had an NgB and benign prostatic hyperplasia, and one had an NgB and prostatic cancer. PVR urinary volume changed from 161.4±90.0 mL at baseline to 116.3±63.1 mL at 2 weeks post-treatment (P<0.05) (Figure 1). In eleven men, PVR urinary volume decreased from 170.4±109.8 mL at baseline to 115.9±74.4 mL at 2 weeks (P<0.05). In eight women, PVR urinary volume decreased from 149.1±57.6 mL at baseline to 116.8±48.3 mL at 2 weeks (P<0.05). Thus acotiamide was effective in both men and women.
Table 1.
Number of patients | 19 |
Sex (male/female) | 11/8 |
Mean age (range) | 75.7 (61–89) |
NgB (male) | 8 |
Mean prostatic volume (cm3) | 17.3 |
NgB and BPH (male) | 2 |
Mean prostatic volume (cm3) | 42.5 |
NgB and prostatic cancer (male) | 1 |
Mean prostatic volume (cm3) | 8 |
NgB (female) | 8 |
Concomitant drug | |
Tamsulosin hydrochloride | 5 |
Naftopidil | 1 |
Silodosin | 5 |
Urapidil | 8 |
Abbreviations: NgB, neurogenic bladder; BPH, benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Discussion
DU has the advantage of a published urodynamic definition that relates to the abnormalities underlying symptoms. However, the term DU, by virtue of vagueness of its clinical characterization based on symptoms, is unlikely to mean as much to patients and clinicians as overactive bladder.7
DU is a condition often misdiagnosed until a large PVR urinary volume is noted. Patients with DU are at a potential risk of developing chronic renal failure due to chronic urinary retention, if they are not promptly diagnosed. These patients usually present with voiding difficulties, recurrent urinary tract infections or overflow incontinence.
In clinical practice, α-blockers are widely used to attain urethral relaxation. If despite treatment with α-blockers difficulty with urination persists, distigmine bromide, an AChE inhibitor, is often used.3,8,9
Acotiamide hydrochloride is effective in patients with functional dyspepsia.10 Moreover, as this drug has bladder selectivity (ZERIA Pharmaceutical Co, Ltd, unpublished data), we thought that acotiamide hydrochloride would be more effective than distigmine bromide in patients with DU. As expected, acotiamide hydrochloride decreased PVR urinary volume in the present study and thus the drug may be a promising one for treating DU.
Despite the very small number of patients included in this study and its short duration, we could attain a significant decrease of PVR urinary volume using acotiamide. Moreover, none of the patients developed an adverse event as serious as cholinergic crisis. The results of this study indicate that acotiamide may be as effective as distigmine bromide in decreasing PVR urinary volume. We think that a prospective randomized controlled study should be done in the near future. And we must expand on the mechanism as to how this drug really works.
Footnotes
Disclosure
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
References
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