Bowel Dysfunction Clinical Trials

10 recruitingLast updated: June 18, 2026

There are 10 actively recruiting bowel dysfunction clinical trials across 6 countries. Studies span Not Applicable. Top locations include Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, Aarhus, Denmark, Beijing, China. Updated daily from ClinicalTrials.gov.


Bowel Dysfunction Trials at a Glance

10 actively recruiting trials for bowel dysfunction are listed on ClinicalTrialsFinder across 6 cities in 6 countries. The largest study group is Not Applicable with 8 trials, with the heaviest enrollment activity in Vancouver, Aarhus, and Beijing. Lead sponsors running bowel dysfunction studies include University of British Columbia, Odense University Hospital, and Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

Browse bowel dysfunction trials by phase

Treatments under study

About Bowel Dysfunction Clinical Trials

Looking for clinical trials for Bowel Dysfunction? There are currently 5 studies actively recruiting participants. Clinical trials offer access to new treatments before they are widely available, and every approved therapy in use today was first tested through a clinical trial.

Below you can browse trials, sign up for alerts when new Bowel Dysfunction trials open, and view eligibility criteria for each study. Each listing includes the study phase, locations, and enrollment details.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Bowel Dysfunction clinical trials

A clinical trial is a carefully designed research study that tests new medical treatments, drugs, devices, or approaches in human volunteers. Every approved medication and treatment available today was proven safe and effective through clinical trials.

All clinical trials are reviewed and approved by Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) — independent committees that evaluate patient safety. Trials follow strict protocols, and your health is monitored closely throughout. You can withdraw at any time.

Not necessarily. Many trials compare the new treatment against the current standard of care, meaning all participants receive active treatment. When placebos are used, they are typically combined with standard treatment, not given alone. The trial description will always specify the design.

Under the Affordable Care Act, most private insurers are required to cover routine patient care costs during a clinical trial. The sponsor typically covers the investigational treatment itself. Medicare also covers routine costs for qualifying trials.

Yes. Participation is completely voluntary. You can withdraw at any time, for any reason, without it affecting your access to standard medical care.

Each trial has specific eligibility criteria — including age, diagnosis, disease stage, prior treatments, and general health. Browse the trials listed above and check their eligibility sections. You can also contact the trial site directly to discuss your situation.

Showing 110 of 10 trials

Recruiting
Not Applicable

Vibrant Capsule for Spinal Cord Injury Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction

Spinal Cord Injuryneurogenic bowel dysfunction
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston12 enrolled1 locationNCT07213986
Recruiting

Seattle Spatial Transcriptomic Research in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Evaluation (STRIDE)

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesCrohn DiseaseUlcerative Colitis+9 more
Seattle Children's Hospital200 enrolled1 locationNCT06315179
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Stimulation for Bowel Emptying

neurogenic bowel dysfunction
VA Office of Research and Development12 enrolled1 locationNCT06078176
Recruiting
Not Applicable

SCS Therapy for Patients With Bladder and Bowel Dysfunction After SCI

SCI - Spinal Cord InjuryBladder and Bowel Dysfunction
Beijing Tsinghua Chang Gung Hospital10 enrolled1 locationNCT07511244
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Noninvasive Spinal Cord Stimulation for Early SCI

Sexual DysfunctionAutonomic DysfunctionSpinal Cord Injuries+2 more
University of British Columbia60 enrolled1 locationNCT06587841
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Non-invasive Spinal Cord Stimulation for Recovery of Autonomic Function After Spinal Cord Injury

Sexual DysfunctionAutonomic DysfunctionSpinal Cord Injury+4 more
University of British Columbia30 enrolled2 locationsNCT05369520
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Enteral Feeding of Fibre to Improve Microbiota

Colon DiseaseBowel DysfunctionIleum--Diseases
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust15 enrolled1 locationNCT06288464
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Sacral Neuromodulation for Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract, Bowel and Sexual Dysfunction

Quality of LifeSexual DysfunctionMultiple Sclerosis+3 more
Odense University Hospital60 enrolled1 locationNCT05380856
Recruiting

Impaired Toilet Training, LUTS and Bowel Dysfunction in Children With DCD

developmental coordination disorderLower Urinary Tract SymptomsBowel Dysfunction
University Hospital, Ghent84 enrolled2 locationsNCT06311110
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Bladder and Bowel Dysfunction in Children

Bladder and Bowel Dysfunction
University of Aarhus100 enrolled3 locationsNCT05318365