Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT07186465
Microbiome-Modulating Prophylaxis RCT: Antibiotic vs Gynoflor in Postmenopausal Women With Recurrent Cystitis
Evaluating Urinary Microbiome Modulation :An RCT of Antibiotic vs Gynoflor Prophylaxis in Postmenopausal Women With Recurrent Cystitis
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- Phase 4
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 100 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Mahidol University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- Female
- Age
- 40 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
This open-label, parallel-group randomized controlled trial compares two prophylaxis strategies for recurrent urinary tract infection (rUTI) in postmenopausal women: (1) nightly oral nitrofurantoin 100 mg for 6 months versus (2) a vaginal tablet containing Lactobacillus with ultra-low-dose estriol (Gynoflor: nightly for 14 days, then twice weekly to month 6). Participants (≥40 years) are randomized 1:1 in computer-generated blocks and followed for 6 months. The primary endpoint is the proportion with rUTI recurrence within 6 months. Secondary endpoints include time to first recurrence, antibiotic resistance in breakthrough infections, change in lower urinary tract symptoms (Thai RUTISS), and urinary microbiome measures (Lactobacillus dominance and community diversity by qPCR and 16S rRNA). Key assessments occur at baseline and month 6 (urinalysis, culture, urinary microbiome sampling, and kidney function). Adherence and adverse events are captured via twice-weekly phone/Line contacts. Approximately 100 participants (50 per arm) will be enrolled as a feasibility-sized pilot.
Detailed description
Background and Rationale Recurrent cystitis is common after menopause and burdens quality of life and healthcare use. Antibiotic prophylaxis is effective but may promote antimicrobial resistance with long-term use. Vaginal Lactobacillus with ultra-low-dose estriol can restore urogenital flora and potentially reduce rUTI and lower urinary tract symptoms. Comparative data versus nightly antibiotic prophylaxis-and effects on the urinary microbiome-remain limited. This trial directly evaluates clinical recurrence and microbiome modulation with nitrofurantoin versus a Lactobacillus/estriol vaginal tablet over 6 months. Objectives Primary objective: Compare the 6-month rUTI recurrence proportion between nitrofurantoin and Gynoflor. Key secondary objectives: (a) time to first recurrence; (b) antimicrobial resistance patterns in breakthrough infections; (c) change in Thai RUTISS score; (d) Lactobacillus dominance and within-sample diversity of the urinary microbiome. Key Endpoint Definitions rUTI recurrence (primary): ≥1 symptomatic episode meeting clinical criteria with urine culture growth of a uropathogen during the 6-month follow-up (episodes during temporary treatment holds still count toward the endpoint). Time to first recurrence: days from randomization to first qualifying rUTI. Antibiotic resistance: susceptibility profile of cultured uropathogens from breakthrough infections, categorized per local laboratory standards. Microbiome metrics: quantitative Lactobacillus abundance (qPCR) and alpha diversity indices from 16S rRNA profiling. Design Overview Open-label, two-arm, parallel RCT with 1:1 allocation by concealed, computer-generated block randomization. Follow-up is 6 months. Masking is not feasible due to intervention routes; laboratory personnel for microbiome and culture testing are shielded from allocation where practicable. Interventions (Summary) Nitrofurantoin arm: 100 mg orally once nightly through month 6. Gynoflor arm: one vaginal tablet nightly for 14 days, then twice weekly (e.g., Monday/Friday) through month 6. (Rescue treatment for symptomatic UTI follows standard of care; study prophylaxis resumes afterward to complete 6 months.) Study Procedures (Selected) Baseline (Day 0): consent, randomization, Thai RUTISS, urinalysis, urine culture, urinary microbiome sampling, BUN/creatinine. Follow-up (Months 0-6): twice-weekly phone/Line check-ins to reinforce adherence and capture symptoms/adverse events; prompt clinical evaluation if UTI symptoms arise. Month 6: repeat Thai RUTISS, urinalysis/culture, urinary microbiome sampling, BUN/creatinine. Specimen handling: midstream clean-catch urine; UA \~20 mL, culture 5-10 mL, microbiome \~50 mL. Samples processed promptly or refrigerated at 4 °C ≤24 h if needed. Laboratory Methods (Overview) Urinary microbiome assays are performed at the Department of Medical Sciences: (1) qPCR estimating Lactobacillus abundance across time points; (2) 16S rRNA gene sequencing for community profiling and alpha diversity. Sample Size and Analysis Plan (Pilot) Approximately 100 participants (50/arm) are planned based on local feasibility for an initial pilot. Analyses will follow intention-to-treat with supportive per-protocol summaries. The primary endpoint will be compared between arms using a risk difference with 95% CIs and a chi-square or Fisher's exact test. Time-to-event data will be presented with Kaplan-Meier estimates and log-rank testing. Continuous outcomes (e.g., Thai RUTISS change) will use t-tests or Wilcoxon rank-sum as appropriate; paired pre/post within-arm changes will use paired tests. Missing outcome data will be handled by complete-case analysis with sensitivity analyses (e.g., worst-case imputation for the primary endpoint) if missingness \>5-10%. Safety Monitoring and Adherence Expected risks include nitrofurantoin intolerance (e.g., GI upset, hypersensitivity), local vaginal irritation, minor phlebotomy discomfort, and time burden. Adverse events are solicited during twice-weekly contacts and at visits; serious adverse events are reported per IRB policy. Given the low-risk profile and pilot scope, a formal DSMB is not planned; the PI and study team review safety at regular intervals. Adherence is promoted by structured reminders and documented via participant report during check-ins. Data Management and Quality Case report forms are source-verified against electronic medical records and laboratory outputs. Microbiome and culture laboratories follow internal QC procedures; analytical staff are kept unaware of allocation when feasible. Randomization files are access-restricted; analysis is pre-specified prior to database lock.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DRUG | Nitrofurantoin | Nightly oral nitrofurantoin 100 mg for 6 months as prophylaxis for recurrent UTI in postmenopausal women. If symptomatic UTI occurs, treat per standard care and, once resolved, continue assigned prophylaxis to complete 6 months. Monitoring per protocol: baseline and month-6 visits with urinalysis, urine culture, urinary microbiome, and kidney function; twice-weekly phone/Line check-ins for adherence, symptoms, and adverse events. |
| DRUG | Gynoflor | Vaginal tablet containing Lactobacillus with ultra-low-dose estriol. Insert 1 tablet nightly for 14 days, then twice weekly through month 6 as prophylaxis against recurrent urinary tract infection. If a symptomatic UTI occurs, treat per standard of care; after resolution, continue assigned prophylaxis to complete 6 months. Monitoring identical to comparator. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2025-09-11
- Primary completion
- 2026-06-30
- Completion
- 2026-08-30
- First posted
- 2025-09-22
- Last updated
- 2025-09-25
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Thailand
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07186465. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.