View clinical trials related to Urinary Tract Infections.
Filter by:UROGEN WELL D-ONE Principal research question: Can the UROGEN WELL D-ONE assay detect urinary tract infections and urethritis in clinical samples from patients attending Genitourinary Medicine outpatient clinics as accurately as standard laboratory microscopy and culture methodologies, while simultaneously identifying antimicrobial resistance? The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the rapid diagnostic assay UROGEN WELL D-ONE and determine if it can accurately detect infectious organisms causing UTI's and urethritis. Secondary research question: Is the antimicrobial resistance identified by the UROGEN WELL D-ONE assay accurate as compared to determination by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute international guidelines? The secondary research objective will be to assess the accuracy of the breakpoint antimicrobial susceptibility measurement by the assay. This is particularly important with the global increase in antibiotic resistance, when the acquisition of mobile resistance genes to the remaining effective therapeutics is rising internationally.
This retrospective study is to determine if the use of PCR for detection and identification of pathogens in UTI along with antimicrobial susceptibility information, affords more efficacious treatment of UTI, as compared to traditional urine culture for patients served by House Call Physicians.
To evaluate the safety and efficacy of treatment of children with acute bacterial infection disease with Ceftriaxone Sodium and Sulbactam Sodium for Injection in the condition of widely used, and provide the basis of adjusting the dosage regimen for children in particular.
Urinary tract infections (UTI) represent one of the most common morbidities in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI) and reason for re-hospitalization. The consequences of recurrent UTI are a decrease in quality of life and considerable health costs. Immunomodulation therapy with UroVaxom is a very promising method for the prevention of UTI, however data in individuals with SCI are very limited. The primary objective of this pilot study is to evaluate the feasibility (recruitment rate, patient attrition, compliance, assessment procedures etc.) of a main trial. A secondary objective is to collect data for an informed sample size calculation. Furthermore, the clinical and biological changes after immunomodulation therapy will be investigated. This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, mono-centric pilot study investigating the feasibility of a main trial regarding the effectiveness of immunomodulation with UroVaxom in the prevention of UTI and the effect on the immune system in individuals with acute SCI during primary rehabilitation. There will be two parallel groups of 12 participants each. Group allocation will be based on a block-randomization stratified according to sex. Study participants and outcome assessors will be blinded to the group allocation. The nursing staff will be unblinded and will administer the treatment and the placebo. Study participants will either receive Uro-Vaxom (one tablet / day) or an off-the-shelf placebo for 90 days. After termination of the treatment, the study participants will be followed for 12 months. Blood and urine samples will be taken before and 90 days, 6 months and 12 months after treatment start.
This is a randomized controlled trial to determine if there is a difference between chlorhexidine gluconate and povidone iodine vaginal preparations for urogynecological surgery post operative infections.
This randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study investigated the efficacy and safety of the herbal medicinal product containing a combination of extracts of restharrow root (Ononidis radix), Java tea (Orthosiphonis folium) and goldenrod herb (Solidaginis herba) in women with acute lower uUTI.
The study will be conducted to evaluate the therapeutic response (combined per participant microbiological and clinical response) of oral gepotidacin compared to oral nitrofurantoin for treatment of uncomplicated UTI (acute cystitis) in adolescent and adult female participants.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a tailored multifaceted antibiotic stewardship intervention reduces antibiotic use for urinary tract infections in residential care homes and nursing homes attended by general practitioners. This will be evaluated in a pragmatic cluster randomised controlled trial using a modified community-based participatory action research approach.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and feasibility of administering glycosaminoglycan (GAG) therapy, iAluRil®, intravesically in individuals with acute spinal cord injury (SCI), commencing within the first ten days of injury, to prevent early urinary tract infections.
In this protocol, investigators are examining the ability for a novel multiplex PCR assay with mixed floral antibiotic resistance profiling is safe and increases effective treatment for urinary tract infections in a urology clinic over traditional culture methods alone and decreases retreatment rates in this population.