Urinary Tract Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Perioperative Disodium Fosfomycin in the Prophylaxis of Urinary Tract Infection in Kidney Transplant Recipients. Controlled Clinical Trial (PERIFOS Trial)
A clinical controlled, randomized and double blind trial that included adult patients (≥18
years) receiving kidney transplantation (KT) at the INCMNSZ.
The intervention group will receive disodium fosfomycin 4 g intravenously in three moments:
preoperative of transplant surgery, prior to removal of the urinary catheter and finally
prior to removal of ureteral catheter. The control group will receive placebo in the same
moments.
Both groups will receive prophylaxis standard for urinary tract infection (UTI), with
trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole 160/800 mg per day. This prophylaxis will be administered once
the estimated glomerular filtration rate is greater than 30 mL/min/1.73m2.
The primary objective is to compare the average number of episodes of UTI´s and asymptomatic
bacteriuria in both groups after 7 weeks of follow-up. The secondary objectives are to know
the incidence of asymptomatic bacteriuria, the incidence of hospitalizations for IVU, the
days of hospital stay, the pattern of bacterial resistance, the safety of disodium
fosfomycin, and assessment of the function of the graft and rejection rate.
In the context of development UTI in receptors of KT, some microbiological factors have
raised great importance, mainly the antimicrobial drug resistance, which has been reported
for TMP/SMX as high as 60 to 100%. Furthermore, it is also of increasing importance the
recent isolation of multidrug-resistant bacteria, in particular ESBL-producing Escherichia
coli and ampicillin-resistant Enterococcus. This phenomenon increases the rate of
hospitalizations as well as the costs of hospital stay and antibiotic therapy. (1-3) In our
institution, in receptors of KT the rate of TMP/SMX resistance is 89% and ESBL-production
about 32% among E. coli recovered from urine. (4)
Because of the increase in the rate of TMP-SMX resistance, there is a lot of interest to use
other antibiotics for the prevention of UTI among different populations. In this sense,
fosfomycin is an agent with a unique mechanism of action that does not share with other
families of known antibiotics, this characteristic provides advantages to use this antibiotic
alone or, even, synergistically in combination with other antibiotics. Fosfomycin (FOS) is a
wall antibiotic (pyruvyl-transferase inhibitor) that has shown a good bioavailability,
especially in the urinary tract. It has shown a wide antibacterial spectrum, but the
important target seems to be enteric bacilli particularly Escherichia coli (the most
prevalent cause of UTI). FOS has also shown a very good activity against E. coli producer of
Extended Spectrum Betalactamases.
Multiple clinical studies have shown FOS efficacy in the treatment of UTI's and especially in
multiple-drug-resistant bacteria. (5) With regard to its use as a perioperative prophylaxis,
in a systematic review with 8 trials, FOS proved to be effective to prevent health
care-associated UTI's, however only one study showed no benefit. The oral dose regularly used
is FOS 3 g, 3 hours before and 24 hours after the surgical procedure. (6)
Our hypothesis is that in the seven weeks after kidney transplantation, perioperative
prophylaxis with FOS will show greater efficacy in comparison with standard prophylaxis
(TMP/SMX). Considering that the mean number of UTI and BA episodes per patient in the first
seven weeks is 0.8 episodes / patient, if we want to decrease it to 0.4 episodes per patient,
using the means comparison formula will require 40 patients per arm per treatment, this
considering a power of 80% and confidence intervals of 95%. The primary outcome will be to
compare the mean number of episodes of urinary tract infection and asymptomatic bacteriuria
per patient in each treatment arm. Secondary outcomes refer to the development of
UTI-associated sepsis, pyelonephritis, recurrent UTI and asymptomatic bacteriuria. Safety
outcomes included hematological and gastrointestinal side effects, the acute rejection rate,
glomerular filtration rate, graft loss and patient death.
Patients eligible for a kidney transplant will be invited to participate in the study, prior
to renal transplant surgery. They are given an informed consent, which is reviewed and
approved by the ethics and research committees of our institution. The arms of the study are
discussed in detail below. The study followed the Declaration of Helsinki recommendations and
was approved by the Institutional Review Board (Ref: 1649). Randomization was conducted
centrally by stratifying according to gender, with specific software (www.randomization.com).
Patients were assigned to one of two parallel groups in a 1:1 ratio and in blocks of 4.
Subjects will be followed up for 7 weeks from renal transplant surgery. The outcome variables
are defined as follows:
- Positive urine culture: The isolated germ will be defined depending on international
standards. For enterobacteria and gram positive ≥100,000 colony-forming unit (CFU) / mL.
- Urinary tract infection: Positive urine culture plus presence of associated signs or
symptoms.
- Significant Asymptomatic Bacteriuria: Will be identified from isolation ≥100,000 CFU/mL.
In the case of women, the same insulation should be corroborated in a second urine
culture sample.
- Asymptomatic Bacteriuria not significant: It will be identified from isolation of ≥1000
CFU/mL and will not be given antibiotic treatment.
- Hospitalization due to UTI: It will be defined as any UTI event that warrants
hospitalization or that, having another reason for hospitalization, develop IVU that
requires intravenous antimicrobial treatment.
The urine cultures will be taken from the first urine in the morning, obtaining the sample of
medium jet with an approximate volume to collect of 25 to 50 mL. Urine samples were processed
within the first hour after obtention.
The sample was inoculated in human blood agar and McConkey agar with a 1 microliter
calibrated loop, and incubated at 35ºC, overnight. The report included the number of CFU. All
clinical isolates were identified with the gram-negative and gram-positive identification
cards by Vitek 2 (BioMérieux, Lyon, France) following the manufacturer´s instructions.
AST-285 Vitek2 cards were used for gram-negative bacilli and the AST-591 Vitek2 card for
gram-positive cocci (BioMérieux, Lyon, France); they were incubated and then interpreted by
an expert in the system (version 7.01) and according to the Clinical & Laboratory Standards
Institute (CLSI) M100-S24 (2014) guideline (20). Susceptibility to fosfomycin was determined
by disk diffusion on cation-supplemented Müeller Hinton agar plates (CLSI, M07-A9); a
bacterial suspension was inoculated in 0.5 mL Mc Farland, and a fosfomycin disk (200
micrograms [mcg]) supplemented with glucose-6-phosphate was used (50 mcg). Interpretation of
inhibition halos in E. coli and Enterococcus faecalis isolates was based on CLSI M100-S24
(2014) criteria. The following were used as controls: E. coli ATCC 25922, E. coli ATCC 35218,
Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 29213 and S. aureus ATCC 43300. Antimicrobial sensitivity to
fosfomycin was determined with the microdilution broth method in E. coli, Klebsiella
pneumoniae and Enterococcus spp. isolates. Müeller Hinton broth supplemented with
glucose-6-phosphate (25 mcg/ml) was used, E. coli ATCC 25922, S. aureus ATCC 29213 and
Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853 were included as controls and results were interpreted
according to the CLSI (M07-A10) and European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility
Testing (EUCAST) 2015 criteria (20,21).
Urine culture will be performed in the following situations: 1.- 48 hrs after the removal of
the urinary catheter. 2.- Prior to removal of the ureteral catheter. 3.- At 4 weeks after
renal transplantation. 4.- At 6 weeks after renal transplantation. 5.-In case of urinary
storage symptoms suggestive of UTI or elevated creatinine (If the emergency department
approach requires it). 6.- After antibiotic treatment of urinary tract infection or
significant asymptomatic bacteriuria. In the case of women who have an episode of significant
asymptomatic bacteriuria, this should be corroborated in two consecutive urine cultures.
Subjects will have the following follow-up visits: before ureteral catheter removal (first
visit), 4 weeks of renal transplantation (second visit), 6 weeks (third visit) and one final
visit at week 7.
Both follow-up visits and reports of urine cultures are recorded in the CRFs for each
patient. In the follow-up consultations, adverse events will also be registered, if they are
reported, are notified to the institutional committees and to the regulatory institutions of
the health system of Mexico. An intermediate analysis will be carried out to determine both
the effectiveness and safety of the interventions.
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