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. 2020 Jun;14(6):187-191.
doi: 10.5489/cuaj.6323.

A drug-coated balloon treatment for urethral stricture disease: Interim results from the ROBUST I study

Affiliations

A drug-coated balloon treatment for urethral stricture disease: Interim results from the ROBUST I study

Ramon Virasoro et al. Can Urol Assoc J. 2020 Jun.

Abstract

Introduction: We aimed to investigate the safety and preliminary efficacy of the Optilume™ paclitaxel-coated balloon for the treatment of recurrent urethral stricture.

Methods: Men with bulbar urethral strictures ≤2 cm with 1-4 prior endoscopic treatments were enrolled at four study sites after ethics committee approvals. All subjects were treated with mechanical balloon dilation or direct visualization internal urethrotomy prior to drug-coated balloon treatment. Patients were evaluated at 2-5 days, 14 days, three, six, and 12-months post-treatment. The primary safety endpoint was serious complications through 90 days post-procedure. The preliminary efficacy endpoint was anatomic success, defined as urethral lumen ≥14 Fr at 12 months.

Results: A total of 53 subjects were enrolled and treated; 46 completed the 12-month followup. Forty-three percent of men had undergone >1 previous dilation; the mean for the overall study population was 1.7 prior dilations. There were no serious adverse events related to the treatment within 90 days. Anatomic success was achieved in 32/46 (70%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 54-82%) at 12 months. The 14 failures included seven cystoscopic recurrences, five retreatments, and two patients who exited the study early due to symptom recurrence.

Conclusions: One-year data indicates the Optilume paclitaxel-coated balloon is safe for the treatment of recurrent bulbar urethral strictures. Early efficacy results are encouraging and support further followup of these men through five years, as well as further investigation with a randomized trial.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: Dr. Elliott, Dr. Virasoro, and Dr. DeLong serve as consultants for Urotronic. The remaining authors report no competing personal or financial interests related to this work.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Adverse event, relation to treatment, and severity. Severity was determined using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE v4.0) severity scale.

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