Clinical Investigation To Evaluate Cerviron Ovules® in Symptomatic Vaginitis

NCT ID: NCT04735705

Last Updated: 2023-11-22

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2021-04-01

Study Completion Date

2021-09-09

Brief Summary

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CYRON is a Prospective, Open-Label, Pilot, Multicentric Clinical Investigation to Evaluate the Performance and Safety of Cerviron Ovules® in the Local Treatment of Non-Specific or Endogenous, Symptomatic Vaginitis. The primary objective is to assess the therapeutic performance and tolerability of Cerviron® Ovules in patients with symptomatic, non-specific, non-infectious vaginitis, and endogenous symptomatic infections.

The secondary objective of this clinical investigation is the assessment of performance of the medical device by several additionally clinical outcomes (vaginal discharge, vaginal pH, microscopic characteristics of inflammatory cells and characteristics of vaginal microflora).

Participants will also evaluate the degree of satisfaction related to the use of the medical device.

Detailed Description

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Vaginitis is the general term characterizing a spectrum of disorders of the vagina caused by infection, inflammation, or changes in the normal vaginal flora. Symptoms include abnormal vaginal discharge, odour, pruritus, pain, dysuria and/or discomfort. Moreover, vaginitis is responsible for the most common problems in clinical medicine, and it is the reason cited most often for visits to obstetricians and gynecologists. In the past years, the problem of vaginitis has all too often been ignored by the medical community or regarded merely as a minor annoyance to women. According to Gardner, "Vaginitis must cause more unhappiness on earth than any other gynecologic disease. In addition to the many physical and emotional problems associated with vaginitis, the economic loss involved is of astronomic proportions." The most common causes of vaginitis are bacterial vaginosis, vulvovaginal candidiasis, and trichomoniasis. Bacterial Vaginosis is the cause in 40% to 50% of cases in which a cause is identified, with vulvovaginal candidiasis accounting for 20% to 25% and trichomoniasis for 15% to 20% of cases. The standard of care currently is based on anti-infectious therapy. With the availability of complementary and alternative therapies and over-the-counter medications for vaginitis, many symptomatic women seek these products before or in addition to an evaluation by a medical provider. However, recurrence of vaginosis is frequent, and can include four or more episodes in one year.

Non-infectious cases, including atrophic, irritant, and inflammatory vaginitis, are less common and account for 5% to 10% of vaginitis cases. Obtaining a medical history alone has been shown to be insufficient for accurate diagnosis of vaginitis and can lead to the inappropriate administration of medication. Therefore, a careful history, examination, and laboratory testing to determine the etiology of vaginal symptoms are needed. Information on sexual behaviors and practices, gender of sex partners, menses, vaginal hygiene practices (e.g., douching), and self-treatment with medications should be collected.

Other causes of vaginitis There is no cause of vagini¬tis identified in up to 30% of women. These women may have a range of conditions, includ¬ing irritant or allergic vaginitis, atrophic vaginitis, or physiologic discharge. The presence of objective signs of vulvar inflammation in the absence of vaginal pathogens after laboratory testing suggests the possibility of mechanical, chemical, allergic, or other non-infectious causes of vulvovaginal signs or symptoms.

Inflammatory vagi¬nitis is an uncommon condition characterized by purulent vaginal discharge, burning, and dyspa¬reunia, and should be considered in patients with these symptoms if no infectious cause is found. Inflammatory vaginitis is associated with low estrogen levels, such as in menopausal or perimenopausal women.

Desquamative inflammatory vaginitis is a chronic inflammatory process involving both vagina and vestibule, occurring almost exclusively in white women, that responds well to topical anti-inflammatory therapy. Long-term maintenance therapy is frequently required.

Irritant/allergic vaginitis is characterized by symptoms such as burning and soreness and signs such as vulvar erythema.

Atrophic vaginitis is an uncommon condition that occurs as a consequence of estrogen deficiency and is characterized by symptoms such as thin, clear discharge, vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, itching. An examination of the vulva can indicate inflammation and thin and friable vaginal mucosa. Risk factors contributing to atrophic vaginitis are menopause, lactation, oophorectomy, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, immunologic disorders, premature ovarian failure, endocrine disorders, and antioestrogen medications.

Aerobic vaginitis is a distinct vaginal condition, requiring different clinical management and with distinct clinical risks. (7) Aerobic vaginitis is defined by disruption in Lactobacillus dominance but is accompanied by more extreme inflammatory changes than BV and the presence of mainly aerobic enteric commensals or pathogens, including Group B Streptococcus (S. agalactiae), Enterococcus faecalis, Escherichia coli, and S. aureus. Streptococcus agalactiae (group B Streptococcus, GBS) vaginal pathogenicity is not uniformly acknowledged throughout the literature. GBS virulence for vagina was recognized in the past, as the organism has been observed to potentially cause local inflammation and discharge, as well as lactobacilli rarefaction.

Cytolitytic vaginosis is another condition which has been recently described as an entity distinct from either normal flora or bacterial vaginosis. This condition, also called Doderlein's vaginitis, has numerous, active lactobacilli damaging epithelial cells because of extreme acidity and low pH. The bare nuclei and cellular debris that are seen during microscopy, should not be mistaken for leucocytes and cocci.

Cerviron ovules® is a class IIb medical device indicated as adjuvant in the treatment of acute and chronic vulvovaginitis of mechanical etiology, caused by changes of vaginal pH and changes of the vaginal flora. It is also used in cervical lesions of mechanical origin as it favors the healing and re-epithelialization processes and reduces the proliferation of endogenous pathogens.

This is the first clinical investigation on human subjects with this medical device, in which 50 patients will be enlisted, and which will take place in two research centres in Romania.

Conditions

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Vaginitis and Vulvovaginitis

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Cerviron vaginal ovules

Since Cerviron® has an innovative composition, we preferred an exploratory approach for the design of the present clinical investigation.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Cerviron

Intervention Type DEVICE

Cerviron ovules ® is a class IIb medical device indicated as adjuvant in the treatment of acute and chronic vulvovaginitis of mechanical etiology, caused by changes of vaginal pH and changes of the vaginal flora. It is also used in cervical lesions of mechanical origin as it favors the healing and re-epithelialization processes and reduces the proliferation of endogenous pathogens.

Interventions

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Cerviron

Cerviron ovules ® is a class IIb medical device indicated as adjuvant in the treatment of acute and chronic vulvovaginitis of mechanical etiology, caused by changes of vaginal pH and changes of the vaginal flora. It is also used in cervical lesions of mechanical origin as it favors the healing and re-epithelialization processes and reduces the proliferation of endogenous pathogens.

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Adult females, aged 18 years to 65 years;
* Subjects presenting two or more vaginal symptoms such as leucorrhoea, pruritus, burning sensation, erythema, pain, odour, dysuria, or dyspareunia;
* Subjects with a diagnosis of either non-infectious vaginitis, or endogenous, symptomatic infection;
* Negative for Gardnerella vaginalis, Candida albicans, Trichomonas vaginalis;
* Subjects willing to provide signed informed consent to clinical investigation participation.

Exclusion Criteria

* Subjects in menstrual period or suffering from menorrhagia;
* Colpectomy;
* Subjects with undiagnosed abnormal genital bleeding;
* Subject with vulvar, vaginal or cervical cancer;
* Known, active sexually transmitted infection (STI) in partner, as per anamnesis;
* Subjects with HIV or other immunodeficiency;
* Subjects with any pathology of the female reproductive organs;
* Known allergy or hypersensitivity to the medical device ingredients;
* Use of spermicides;
* Use of diaphragm;
* Concomitant topical or systemic anti-infective treatment;
* Unable to comply with visit procedures;
* Subjects included in other clinical investigations;
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

65 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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MDX Research

NETWORK

Sponsor Role collaborator

Perfect Care Distribution

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Ramona Petrita, CSO

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

MDX Research

Locations

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Spitalul Clinic Județean de Urgență "Pius Brinzeu"

Timișoara, Timiș County, Romania

Site Status

Institutul National pentru Sanatatea Mamei si Copilului (INSMC) "Alessandrescu - Rusescu"

Bucharest, , Romania

Site Status

Countries

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Romania

References

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Toader DO, Olaru RA, Iliescu DG, Petrita R, Calancea FL, Petre I. Clinical Performance and Safety of Vaginal Ovules in the Local Treatment of Nonspecific Vaginitis: A National, Multicentric Clinical Investigation. Clin Ther. 2023 Sep;45(9):873-880. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2023.06.023. Epub 2023 Jul 18.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 37474354 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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CYRON/01/2021

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id