Title

Treatment Of Chronic Anal Fissure
Treatment Of Chronic Anal Fissure (TOCA): a Randomized Clinical Trial on Levorag® Emulgel Versus Diltiazem Gel 2%
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Terminated
  • Study Participants

    55
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of Levorag Emulgel compared with diltiazem gel on the healing of chronic anal fissures.
Anal fissure is an ulcer-like, longitudinal tear in the anal canal, most commonly located in the dorsal or ventral midline, and distal to the dentate line. Anal fissures constitute a common medical problem that affects sexes equally. The initiation of the fissure is most likely caused by the passage of hard stools that traumatizes the anal canal. Patients suffer from anal pain lasting up to several hours after defecation and rectal bleeding.3 Most acute anal fissures heal spontaneously, but a proportion progress into chronic fissures with symptoms beyond 8-12 weeks. There is no strict definition of a chronic anal fissure, but previously the presence of two of the following three symptoms has been used:

Pain after defecation lasting for more than three months;
presence of a sentinel anal tag; and
Exposure of the horizontal fibres of the internal anal sphincter. The severe pain may be caused by a hypertonic contraction of the internal anal sphincter leading to ischemia. Treatment strategies have therefore aimed to relieve this hypertonia by surgical and non-operative approaches. Primary therapy is initiated with ointments such as Diltiazem and glyceryltrinitrat gels.

A novel approach is the Levorag® Emulgel, an ointment classified as Medical Device class 1. According to the manufacturer (THD SpA, Italy) the effect of Levorag® Emulgel is mediated through the effects of myoxinol, a plant extract from the Hibiscus plant with a botox-like effects on the anal sphincter and carboxymethyl glucan, a natural yeast polysaccharide with immune stimulating properties. The effect of the widely used Diltiazem gel, is mediated through diltiazem hydrochloride, a calcium channel blocker that decreases the anal sphincter pressure.

This is an interventional, randomized clinical trial including adult patients with chronic anal fissures referred directly to the Digestive Disease Center, Bispebjerg Hospital, University of Copenhagen, or referred to a private surgical practice in Copenhagen. Patients are randomized to 1) Diltiazem gel 2%, one application twice daily for 8 weeks, or 2) Levorag® Emulgel, one application twice daily for 8 weeks. In addition to the allocated treatment, all patients will be kept on standard care for anal fissure, including high-fibre diet proper hydration and laxatives.

The primary endpoint is the rate of complete healing after 12 weeks. Secondary endpoints are complete healing after 8 weeks, incidence of adverse effects and efficacy on pain relief.
Study Started
Sep 01
2014
Primary Completion
Feb 05
2018
Study Completion
Feb 05
2018
Last Update
Jan 14
2020

Other Levorag Emulgel

  • Other names: Myoxinol, Carboxymethyl glucan

Drug Diltiazem

Diltiazem, calcium channel blocker Active Comparator

Diltiazem gel 2% applied twice daily for 8 weeks

Levorag, Hibiscus plant extract Experimental

Levorag Emulgel applied twice daily for 8 weeks

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Danish citizens, age ≥ 18 years
Presence of a midline anal fissure, dorsal or ventral
Pain during and after defecation lasting for more than 8 weeks
Presence of a sentinel anal tag or hypertrophic papilla
Exposure of the horizontal fibres of the internal anal sphincter

1-3 has to be fulfilled for inclusion. Additionally 4 AND/OR 5 has to be present

Exclusion Criteria:

Inflammatory bowel disease, known venereal disease, immunodeficiency disease
Anal/perianal abscess
Anal or rectal surgery within 12 weeks
Pregnancy or breastfeeding females
History of migraine or chronic headache requiring treatment with analgetics
Any cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease
Current use of calcium channel blockers in general or history of use of calcium channel blockers in the treatment of the fissure
Signs of other rectal diseases, fistula, infection including severe perianal eczema and tumours
No Results Posted