Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection
Conditions
Keywords
Nitrofurantoin, Prolapse, Pelvic Organ Prolapse, Anti-incontinence procedure, Urinary retention, Urinary Tract Infection, Short-term catheterization
Brief summary
The specific aim of this randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy of administration of nitrofurantoin prophylaxis after catheter discontinuation for the prevention of catheter-associated urinary tract infections in patients with postoperative short-term catheterization following pelvic reconstructive surgery and/or urinary incontinence surgery. Patients that undergo pelvic organ prolapse and/or urinary incontinence surgery and fail their post-operative voiding trial will be included in the study. Upon successfully passing and in-office voiding trial at the time of catheter removal, they will be randomized to either nitrofurantoin 100mg twice daily or an identical appearing placebo capsule twice daily for 5 days following catheter removal. The primary outcome will be the treatment of clinically suspected and/or culture-proven UTI within 30 days of surgery. Secondary outcomes include adverse events associated with nitrofurantoin use and medication compliance. Primary and secondary outcomes will be evaluated with Student t test and chi squared or Fisher exact test as appropriate. Assuming a decrease in symptomatic UTIs attributable to nitrofurantoin prophylaxis from 32% to 14%, with 80% power, and a two-sided alpha of 0.05, we should recruit a total of 164 patients.
Detailed description
Urinary tract infections (UTI) are the most common hospital-acquired infections, accounting for nearly 30% of cases of nosocomial infections and affecting nearly 1 million people per year. Following pelvic reconstructive and urinary incontinence surgery, UTIs are one of the most common complications with a risk between 8.9%-34%. The baseline risk of UTI associated with pelvic floor surgery ranges between 5-35%, increasing greatly with catheterization. Postoperative voiding dysfunction and incomplete bladder emptying is common following pelvic reconstructive and incontinence surgeries, with incidence ranging from 2.5 % to 31%. As a result, these women may have additional catheterization for a short period of time, which increases the risk of UTI. There is a 15-20% risk of developing a postoperative UTI with short-term catheterization, even if the catheter remains in place for merely 24 hours. The risk of UTI increases 5-10% each day the catheter is left in place. Numerous studies have been conducted to evaluate different prophylactic antibiotic regimens to help decrease the rate of postoperative catheter-associated UTIs. Many of these studies have shown precedent for the use of antibiotic prophylaxis. Nitrofurantoin has been evaluated as a prophylactic regimen for use during short-term catheterization. These studies had favorable results, decreasing the incidence of UTI postoperatively. Although there are a few studies showing favorable results for the use of prophylactic nitrofurantoin during catheterization after pelvic surgery, the optimal timing of antibiotic administration and length of dosing regimen is not well defined. The American Urological Association (AUA) recommends empiric antibiotic treatment at the time of external urinary catheter removal in patients with risk factors, such as tobacco use, advanced age, and anatomic abnormalities of the urinary tract. The AUA Panel does cite that bacteriuria in the setting of noninfectious urinary tract disease is a risk factor for bacteremia, and, thus, prophylactic antibiotic treatment at time the of catheter removal may be indicated. The AUA does recommend empiric antibiotic treatment at the removal of an external urinary catheter in patients with risk factors. However, there is no standardization concerning the type of antibiotic to be used or treatment duration. Although there are a few studies showing favorable results for use of nitrofurantoin during catheterization after pelvic surgery, there are no clearly defined recommendations regarding its use for urinary tract infection prevention after catheter removal. Therefore, the objective of our study is to examine the effects of administration of nitrofurantoin therapy at the time of Foley catheter removal for the prevention of catheter-associated UTI in patients undergoing POP and/or urinary incontinence surgery. Primary Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of administration of nitrofurantoin prophylaxis after catheter discontinuation for the prevention of catheter-associated urinary tract infections in patients with postoperative short-term catheterization following pelvic reconstructive surgery. The primary outcome will be the treatment of clinically suspected and/or culture-proven UTI within 30 days of surgery. Secondary Objective: To evaluate adverse outcomes related to study medications in each group and to evaluate medication compliance Null Hypothesis: The null hypothesis is that the administration of nitrofurantoin will not reduce the rate of UTI compared with placebo.
Interventions
Patients will receive nitrofurantoin 100mg twice daily by mouth for 5 days
Matching placebo
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Age greater than 18 * Creatinine clearance greater than 30 ml/min * Failed postoperative hospital voiding trial
Exclusion criteria
* Pregnant * History of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency * History of renal insufficiency, renal transplant, or nephropathy * Allergy to nitrofurantoin * History of recurrent UTI (defined as greater than two culture-proven infections in six months or three infections in one year) * Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) within 14 days one month of surgery * Non-English speaking * Urinary tract infection while Foley catheter is in place * On antibiotic therapy for other non-urological reasons * Sustained intraoperative bladder injury requiring prolonged catheterization greater than 5 days * Undergoing mesh excision from within the bladder, fistula repair, cystotomy repair, urethral diverticulectomy, sacral neuromodulation, urethral surgery, or any other procedure requiring prolonged catheterization and bladder decompression * Placement of a suprapubic catheter * Participants that request intermittent self-catheterization * Neurologic conditions affecting urinary tract system and normal voiding mechanisms * History of hepatic impairment due to prior nitrofurantoin use * Inability to provide consent/decisionally impaired * More than two in-office voiding trials
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| UTI | within 30 days of surgery | Number of participants with a urinary tract infection in the first 30 days following pelvic reconstructive surgery |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Adverse Events | within 30 days of surgery | Number of participants with an adverse event only related to study drug administration |
| Medication Compliance | within 30 days of surgery | Compliance assessed by use of a medication diary during treatment period |
Countries
United States
Participant flow
Recruitment details
Consecutive women were prescreened for eligibility and introduced to the study prior to surgery. Women with postoperative urinary retention following pelvic organ prolapse and/or incontinence surgery were approached for study inclusion at the time of their postoperative in-office voiding trial between September 2017 and April 2019.
Pre-assignment details
Women were deemed as enrolled once they consented and randomized. No enrolled participants were excluded with this definition.
Participants by arm
| Arm | Count |
|---|---|
| Nitrofurantoin Receives twice daily 100mg nitrofurantoin for 5 days following catheter removal
Nitrofurantoin 100 MG: Patients will receive nitrofurantoin 100mg twice daily by mouth for 5 days | 82 |
| Placebo Receives twice daily matching placebo for 5 days following catheter removal
Placebo Oral Tablet: Matching placebo | 82 |
| Total | 164 |
Withdrawals & dropouts
| Period | Reason | FG000 | FG001 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Study | Lost to Follow-up | 0 | 2 |
| Overall Study | Physician Decision | 0 | 2 |
| Overall Study | Withdrawal by Subject | 0 | 2 |
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | Nitrofurantoin | Placebo | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Continuous | 61.6 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 11.7 | 61.1 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 12.4 | 61.4 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 12 |
| Body Mass Index (BMI), kg/m^2 | 27.1 kg/m^2 STANDARD_DEVIATION 4.7 | 28.6 kg/m^2 STANDARD_DEVIATION 5 | 27.8 kg/m^2 STANDARD_DEVIATION 4.9 |
| Creatinine Clearance | 84.1 mL/min STANDARD_DEVIATION 30.1 | 94.2 mL/min STANDARD_DEVIATION 34.9 | 89.1 mL/min STANDARD_DEVIATION 32.9 |
| Current Smoking | 6 Participants | 6 Participants | 12 Participants |
| Diabetes Mellitus | 9 Participants | 10 Participants | 19 Participants |
| Duration of Catheterization (days) | 3 days | 3 days | 3 days |
| Estimated Blood Loss (mL) | 45.5 mL STANDARD_DEVIATION 35.5 | 60.9 mL STANDARD_DEVIATION 61.6 | 53.2 mL STANDARD_DEVIATION 50.7 |
| History of Recurrent UTI | 1 Participants | 1 Participants | 2 Participants |
| Length of Hospital Stay (days) | 1 days | 1 days | 1 days |
| Menopausal Status Missing data | 0 Participants | 1 Participants | 1 Participants |
| Menopausal Status Postmenopausal | 64 Participants | 64 Participants | 128 Participants |
| Menopausal Status Premenopausal | 18 Participants | 17 Participants | 35 Participants |
| Operative Time (mins) | 134 minutes STANDARD_DEVIATION 80.8 | 142.9 minutes STANDARD_DEVIATION 86.9 | 138.4 minutes STANDARD_DEVIATION 83.8 |
| Parity | 2 Parity | 2 Parity | 2 Parity |
| POP-Q Stage | 2 units on a scale | 2 units on a scale | 2 units on a scale |
| Postmenopausal Hormone Use No Hormone Therapy | 58 Participants | 58 Participants | 116 Participants |
| Postmenopausal Hormone Use Systemic Hormonal Therapy | 4 Participants | 5 Participants | 9 Participants |
| Postmenopausal Hormone Use Vaginal Estrogen Therapy | 20 Participants | 19 Participants | 39 Participants |
| Preoperative PVR Volume (mL) | 57.9 mL STANDARD_DEVIATION 92.6 | 45.3 mL STANDARD_DEVIATION 55.7 | 51.4 mL STANDARD_DEVIATION 75.5 |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Black | 1 Participants | 8 Participants | 9 Participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Caucasian | 79 Participants | 72 Participants | 151 Participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Other | 2 Participants | 2 Participants | 4 Participants |
| Sex/Gender, Customized Female | 82 Participants | 82 Participants | 164 Participants |
| Sex/Gender, Customized Male | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Anterior repair | 15 Participants | 20 Participants | 35 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Burch colposuspension | 1 Participants | 2 Participants | 3 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Hysterectomy | 32 Participants | 35 Participants | 67 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Iliococcygeus vault suspension | 1 Participants | 1 Participants | 2 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Mid urethral sling surgery | 50 Participants | 47 Participants | 97 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Posterior repair | 53 Participants | 59 Participants | 112 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Sacral colpopexy | 4 Participants | 1 Participants | 5 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Sacrospinous ligament fixation | 0 Participants | 1 Participants | 1 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Uterosacral ligament suspension | 18 Participants | 24 Participants | 42 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Vaginal mesh excision | 4 Participants | 1 Participants | 5 Participants |
| Type of Procedure Vaginectomy/colpocleisis | 7 Participants | 2 Participants | 9 Participants |
Adverse events
| Event type | EG000 affected / at risk | EG001 affected / at risk |
|---|---|---|
| deaths Total, all-cause mortality | 0 / 82 | 0 / 82 |
| other Total, other adverse events | 5 / 82 | 4 / 82 |
| serious Total, serious adverse events | 0 / 82 | 0 / 82 |
Outcome results
UTI
Number of participants with a urinary tract infection in the first 30 days following pelvic reconstructive surgery
Time frame: within 30 days of surgery
| Arm | Measure | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrofurantoin | UTI | 15 Participants |
| Placebo | UTI | 14 Participants |
Adverse Events
Number of participants with an adverse event only related to study drug administration
Time frame: within 30 days of surgery
Population: This is the total number of participants with an allergy or intolerance to the study medication.These adverse symptoms included: hives, pruritus, rash, anaphylaxis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and other.
| Arm | Measure | Category | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrofurantoin | Adverse Events | Nausea | 5 Participants |
| Nitrofurantoin | Adverse Events | Diarrhea | 0 Participants |
| Nitrofurantoin | Adverse Events | Vomiting | 0 Participants |
| Nitrofurantoin | Adverse Events | Other | 0 Participants |
| Nitrofurantoin | Adverse Events | Allergy | 0 Participants |
| Placebo | Adverse Events | Other | 2 Participants |
| Placebo | Adverse Events | Allergy | 0 Participants |
| Placebo | Adverse Events | Nausea | 2 Participants |
| Placebo | Adverse Events | Vomiting | 0 Participants |
| Placebo | Adverse Events | Diarrhea | 0 Participants |
Medication Compliance
Compliance assessed by use of a medication diary during treatment period
Time frame: within 30 days of surgery
Population: Compliance was defined as the number pills taken divided by total number of pills dispensed (10). The closer this ratio is to 1 the better the compliance. The closer the ratio is to 0 the worse the compliance
| Arm | Measure | Value (MEAN) | Dispersion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrofurantoin | Medication Compliance | 0.95 ratio | Standard Deviation 0.18 |
| Placebo | Medication Compliance | 0.96 ratio | Standard Deviation 0.15 |