Urinary Tract Infection Chronic Clinical Trial
Official title:
Individualized Homeopathy to Reduce the Use of Antibiotics in Women With Recurrent Uncomplicated Urinary Tract Infections
The aim of the study is to determine the efficacy of individualised homeopathic drug treatment (potency C200 and C1000) compared to placebo in females (age 18<65) with recurrent urinary tract infections, per definition ≥ 2 UTI in 6 months and/ or ≥ 3 UTI in 9 months.
The World Health Organization has declared the problem of antibiotic resistance to be a global crisis and the European Union has defined, among other things, the reduction of antibiotic use in its strategies to avoid the development of resistance. Recurrent UTIs are one of the most common infectious diseases contributing to a multiple of multidrug- resistant extra intestinal pathogenic E coli, increasing morbidity and mortality due to many treatment failures and hospital admissions, which leads to increased healthcare costs. There is, therefore, an urgent need to optimize appropriate usage, in order to minimize the burden of disease for the patients and the health care services, while maintaining treatment safety at the same time. In Germany, it is currently recommended to treat uncomplicated UTIs symptomatically as long as no dangerous course of the disease can be expected, but different treatment options aiming to decrease the frequency of UTI treated with antibiotics have shown only limited success. Thus, the symptom load of the affected patients as well as prescription rates for antibiotics remain high and treatment options are warranted by patients and physicians. Homeopathy has shown relevant clinical effects for other recurrent infectious diseases and a reduction of the frequency of recurrent UTIs with individualised homeopathic treatment (iHOM) has been observed in practice. In this study we therefore aim to test the efficacy of this treatment approach as an add-on therapy to the treatment standard in a double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised clinical trial. ;