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Novel Probiotic Treatment for Prevention of Recurrent UTIs in Children

Completed
Conditions
Recurrent UTIs
Catheter-Related Infections
Interventions
Drug: Nissle 1917
Registration Number
NCT01696227
Lead Sponsor
Nationwide Children's Hospital
Brief Summary

Background:

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a common and costly cause of doctor visits for children. Frequent UTIs trigger kidney damage that leads to serious diseases like high blood pressure, pregnancy complications, and kidney failure. Treating UTIs with preventative antibiotics has not shown improvement of the risk of these diseases, and contributes to the growing public health issue of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Bacteria that cause UTIs originate from the bowel. In an effort to reduce the number of UTIs, investigators want to exchange the bacteria living in our bowels for a more harmless variety.

Hypothesis and specific aims:

Investigators hypothesize a probiotic comprised of a probiotic bacteria will change the bowel bacteria, thereby reducing the numbers of infection-causing bacteria, thus reducing frequency of UTIs in healthy patients with recurrent UTIs and those patients with urinary tract problems that require use of catheters to empty their bladders.

Aim 1: Investigators plan to challenge infection-causing bacteria like Pseudomonas species, Enterococcus species, and Klebsiella species to live in the same environment with the probiotic bacteria to see how the numbers of each bacteria change.

Aim 2: Investigators will culture bacteria that live on urinary catheters and then challenge them to live in the same environment as the probiotic bacteria.

Potential Impact:

This novel treatment prevents UTIs by exchanging a patient's bowel bacteria for a harmless bacteria and reduces the use of antibiotics overall in the community.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients with urinary catheters placed that will be getting them removed
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patient's currently getting treated for UTI

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Nissle 1917Nissle 1917In vitro, Nissle 1917's ability to adversely affect the growth of uropathogens associated with urinary catheters and those with a known GI resevoir will be measured.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Ability of Nissle 1917 to adversely affect the growth in vitro of identified uropathogens2 years

Uropathogens obtained from discarded clinical samples will be challenged to live in the same environment as the probiotic, Nissle 1917. Colonies of uropathogens and Nissle 1917 will be counted as a measure of the more successful organism as well as, zone of inhibition will be measured in co-cultures.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Nationwide Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Columbus, Ohio, United States

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