Methenamine in a Non-antibiotic, Multimodal Approach to UTI Prevention

NCT ID: NCT03996057

Last Updated: 2022-07-08

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

WITHDRAWN

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-06-20

Study Completion Date

2022-02-11

Brief Summary

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Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the most common bacterial infection and are especially common in postmenopausal women, who often experience recurrent UTIs. Women with recurrent UTIs are commonly treated with antibiotics, but side effects, collateral damage to commensal bacteria, and antimicrobial resistance result from frequent antibiotic use. It is paramount that researchers develop non-antibiotic treatment strategies for UTIs.

Several non-antibiotic strategies may be successful in preventing recurrent UTIs in postmenopausal women, including low-dose vaginal estrogen, d-mannose, and methenamine hippurate. Methenamine hippurate (MH) is interesting as it causes few side effects, kills bacteria by denaturing bacterial proteins, RNA, and DNA, and does not develop resistance. Several studies have demonstrated the efficacy of daily methenamine on the incidence of UTI. However, women often require multiple therapies in order to prevent recurrence. There are currently few guidelines to help clinicians identify optimal treatment regimens for non-antibiotic prevention of UTI.

The purpose of this pilot study is to examine the feasibility of developing a sequential, multiple assignment, randomization trial (SMART); and examine the treatment effect of MH in combination with vaginal estrogen (VET) and D-mannose on prevention of UTI. The investigators plan to examine the efficacy of the addition of MH to low dose VET and d-mannose in the UTI prevention through randomization to MH + VET + D-mannose vs continuing VET + D-mannose alone. The primary outcome will be the proportion of patients who have symptomatic, culture-proven UTI during a 3 month treatment period. The investigators hypothesize that women on low dose VET, d-mannose, and MH will be less likely to have recurrent UTI than those with VET and d-mannose alone.

This study uses a pragmatic, longitudinal approach that mimics patients' clinical experiences and physicians' decision points during management of UTI prophylaxis. Through this randomized, controlled pilot study, this proposal would allow the investigators to examine the feasibility of conducting a larger-scale, adaptive study trial, and estimate the treatment effect of a non-antibiotic regimen augmented with MH in women who continue to develop recurrence.

Detailed Description

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Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the most common bacterial infection and are especially common in postmenopausal women, who often experience recurrent UTIs. Women with recurrent UTIs are commonly treated with antibiotics, but side effects, collateral damage to commensal bacteria, and antimicrobial resistance result from frequent antibiotic use. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that drug resistance contributes to 23,000 deaths, 2,049,442 illnesses, and $20 billion dollars in excess direct healthcare costs in the United States annually. Thus, it is paramount that researchers develop non-antibiotic treatment strategies for UTIs.

Several non-antibiotic strategies may be successful in preventing recurrent UTIs in postmenopausal women. One is low-dose vaginal estrogen, which may decrease the rate of recurrent UTIs by decreasing inflammation, promoting bladder repair, and promoting retention of lactobacilli. Another is d-mannose, a natural sugar that may decrease bacterial adherence to the urothelium. Methenamine hippurate has regained interest recently. First, it causes few side effects. Second, it functions by producing formaldehyde in the urine, which kills bacteria by denaturing bacterial proteins, RNA, and DNA. Thus far, no methenamine-resistant bacteria have been reported to develop in vivo. Lastly, several studies have demonstrated that 2 grams daily of methenamine reduces the incidence of UTI and is likely comparable to the antibiotic nitrofurantoin for UTI prophylaxis. However, in the investigators' clinical experience, women often require multiple therapies in order to prevent recurrence. There are currently few guidelines to help clinicians identify optimal treatment regimens for prevention of UTI. The clinical challenge is to optimize individual treatment regimens by maximizing efficacy and minimizing the number of medications, cost, side effects, and nonadherence for each individual.

The purpose of this pilot study is to 1) examine the feasibility of developing a sequential, multiple assignment, randomization trial (SMART) and 2) examine the treatment effect of methenamine hippurate in combination with vaginal estrogen and D-mannose on prevention of UTI. This adaptive study design allows the investigators to examine the efficacy of non-antibiotic prophylaxis and initiation of subsequent preventative therapies based on individual responses. It is a pragmatic, longitudinal approach that mimics patients' clinical experiences and physicians' decision points during management of UTI prophylaxis. Given the efficacy and relative safety of methenamine hippurate, the investigators are particularly interested in its efficacy among those who have had suboptimal response to vaginal estrogen and D-mannose. The timing of this study is ideal, as the investigators are also currently conducting a trial of vaginal estrogen plus D-mannose in postmenopausal women. Through this randomized, controlled pilot study, this proposal would allow the investigators to examine the feasibility of conducting a larger-scale, adaptive study trial on the use of methenamine hippurate in combination with vaginal estrogen plus D-mannose, and estimate the treatment effect of a non-antibiotic regimen augmented with methenamine hippurate in women who continue to develop recurrence.

This study is a planned extension of a previously proposed clinical trial on d-mannose and vaginal estrogen (IRB#:201711120); however, any postmenopausal women with a history of recurrent UTI, who then develop UTI while on a combined prophylaxis regimen of d-mannose and vaginal estrogen will be eligible for the randomized controlled trial on methenamine augmentation. The investigators plan to examine the efficacy of the addition of methenamine hippurate to low dose vaginal estrogen and d-mannose in the UTI prevention through randomization to methenamine + vaginal estrogen + D-mannose vs continuing vaginal estrogen + D-mannose alone. Patients will be randomized to either the addition of methenamine hippurate or continuing with vaginal estrogen + D-mannose alone. The primary outcome will be the proportion of patients who have symptomatic, culture-proven UTI during a 3 month treatment period. The investigators hypothesize that women on low dose vaginal estrogen, d-mannose, and methenamine hippurate will be less likely to have recurrent UTI than those with low dose vaginal estrogen and d-mannose alone. As part of the study, baseline information and vaginal, urine, and fecal samples may be taken. Additionally, as part of examining feasibility of a larger study, recruitment, retention, refusal, non-compliance, and adherence rates will be collected. Patients who decline or drop out of the study will be contacted to answer questions on reasons for refusal or withdrawal. Subjects who undergo randomization will either add methenamine to their ongoing vaginal estrogen + D-mannose, or continue on vaginal estrogen + D-mannose alone. They will receive weekly calls or text reminders to record study diaries and to take their medications. Patients will follow up at the end of 3 months, at their usual follow up appointment, for routine examination, questionnaires, and urine and possible vaginal and fecal samples. Follow up may be extended up to 1 month prior or 6 months afterward their baseline visit (2-6 months after the baseline visit) for those who do not make their 3 months appointment. The investigators also plan to describe the uropathogen profile and antibiotic resistance of UTIs that occur during prophylaxis with vaginal estrogen + d-mannose, with or without methenamine hippurate. Lastly, the investigators hope to examine the impact of a non-antibiotic prophylaxis regimen that includes methenamine hippurate on the bladder microenvironment as well as the urinary, vaginal, and intestinal microbiomes.

Conditions

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UTI Female Urogenital Diseases UTI - Lower Urinary Tract Infection

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Randomized control pilot trial
Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Attempt will be made to mask the current arm during assessment of outcomes (symptomatic UTI) when the participant calls in with symptoms, as the participant will be asked not to reveal their current prophylaxis regimen unless deemed medically or clinically necessary at the time.

Study Groups

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Methenamine augmentation

2g methenamine hippurate twice daily for 90 days added to a baseline regimen of low dose vaginal estrogen (two to three times per week) and d-mannose (1000 mg twice daily)

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Methenamine Hippurate 1000 MG

Intervention Type DRUG

Discussed in arm/group description

Vaginal estrogen

Intervention Type DRUG

Any form of low dose vaginal estrogen, whether ring, cream, tablet, or capsule. Depends on what patient is already using.

D-mannose

Intervention Type DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

Powder or tablet, depending on what patient is already using.

No methenamine augmentation

Baseline regimen of low dose vaginal estrogen (two to three times per week) and d-mannose (1000 mg twice daily)

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Vaginal estrogen

Intervention Type DRUG

Any form of low dose vaginal estrogen, whether ring, cream, tablet, or capsule. Depends on what patient is already using.

D-mannose

Intervention Type DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

Powder or tablet, depending on what patient is already using.

Interventions

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Methenamine Hippurate 1000 MG

Discussed in arm/group description

Intervention Type DRUG

Vaginal estrogen

Any form of low dose vaginal estrogen, whether ring, cream, tablet, or capsule. Depends on what patient is already using.

Intervention Type DRUG

D-mannose

Powder or tablet, depending on what patient is already using.

Intervention Type DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Postmenopausal women
* History of recurrent UTI (\>=3 culture proven UTIs in one year or \>=2 in 6 months)
* Recurrent, culture proven UTI while on vaginal estrogen for at least 4 weeks + d-mannose prophylaxis
* English speaker

Exclusion Criteria

* Not postmenopausal
* Complicated UTIs
* Known renal tract anomaly
* Liver dysfunction
* Neurogenic bladder
* Incomplete bladder emptying (PVR \> 150 cc when voided volume \>150 cc)
* Self-catheterization or use of indwelling catheter
* Contraindication to vaginal estrogen, methenamine hippurate, or d-mannose, including allergic reactions
* History of or current endometrial cancer
* History of estrogen sensitive breast cancer without approval of patient, patient's oncologist, oncologic surgeon, or primary care physician to use vaginal estrogen after counseling
* History of interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome
* Urothelial cancer
* Enrolled in other clinical trials for UTIs other than Washington University study IRB# 201711120
* Currently on daily antibiotic prophylaxis and unwilling to stop this intervention
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Washington University School of Medicine

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Christine Chu, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Washington University School of Medicine

References

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Cooper TE, Teng C, Howell M, Teixeira-Pinto A, Jaure A, Wong G. D-mannose for preventing and treating urinary tract infections. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2022 Aug 30;8(8):CD013608. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013608.pub2.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 36041061 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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201804086

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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