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Avoiding Bacterial Contamination of Clean Catch Urine Cultures in Ambulatory Patients in the Emergency Department

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Stanford University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Urinary Tract Infections
Bacteriuria
Urinalysis

Treatments

Other: Castile-soap wipe
Other: Silver Impregnated Wipe
Other: Container
Other: Funnel

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to find the best cleaning and collection methods to obtain a 'non-contaminated' clean catch mid-stream urine sample to diagnose suspected urinary tract infection (UTI).

Full description

BACKGROUND: Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a major public health issue resulting in more than 3-million visits to Emergency Departments in the United States each year. As part of the diagnostic work up, a sterile urine sample is requested for culture. The preferred urine specimen is a "Clean Catch Midstream Urine Sample". When patients are ambulatory and competent, this is a self-obtained specimen in a private bathroom. If the urine is not collected in a sterile manner the urine sample may be 'contaminated' by bacteria that originate from the skin or genital area, and not from the urinary tract. This is often described by the clinical laboratory as 'mixed growth bacteria'. A contaminated sample may lead to a false-positive urine culture result. In a non-contaminated urine specimen, only a single bacterial growth is identified as the source of the infection. Mixed bacterial flora with two or more microorganisms makes interpretation of the urine culture more difficult and prone to error. The American College of Pathologists has published results of national laboratory surveys on Urine Culture Contamination in 1998 and 2008 that document the scope of the problem.

SAMPLE: Adult ambulatory patients in the Emergency Department who have a suspected UTI and have a urine culture ordered by a physician. A total of 2000 patients will be enrolled (500 per group). This is estimated to result in 600 urine samples (150 per group). Written consent is not normally required for a self-obtained urine sample. The study will be explained and participants will verbally consent or decline to participate, as approved by the Institutional Review Board.

SETTING: Emergency Department of an academic medical center.

METHOD: This is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 4 groups that compare different patient self-cleaning and self-collection methods. All study supplies materials are commercially available in the United States. Each participant will be provided with study-specific visual aids for male or female participants and their randomly assigned group. The four groups are:

Group 1: Standard moist wipes and standard collection container. Group 2: Silver impregnated moist wipes and standard collection container. Group 3: Standard moist wipes and funnel collection container. Group 4: Silver impregnated moist wipes and funnel collection container. The urine samples will be sent to the Hospital Microbiology Laboratory for analysis. Urine samples with a positive leuk-esterase pre-screen will be sent for urine culture.

DATA ANALYSIS:This study is powered to detect a large effect size change in any study groups (2. 3. 4) compared with control (group 1). The sample size is sufficient to identify the method(s) with the lowest urine sample contamination rate.

Enrollment

1,471 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years of older
  • Urine culture order by physician

Exclusion criteria

  • Under 18 years of age
  • Urinary catheter in place
  • Not ambulatory

Trial design

1,471 participants in 4 patient groups

A: Container + Castile-soap wipe
Description:
Sterile urine collection container and Castile-soap wipe given to patient to self-obtain a clean catch mid-stream urine specimen - Control group represents usual care in the Emergency Department.
Treatment:
Other: Container
Other: Castile-soap wipe
B: Container + Silver impregnated wipe
Description:
Sterile urine collection container and silver-impregnated cloth-wipe given to patient to self-obtain a clean catch mid-stream urine specimen
Treatment:
Other: Container
Other: Silver Impregnated Wipe
C: Funnel + Castile-soap wipe
Description:
Sterile urine collection funnel and Castile-soap wipe given to patient to self-obtain a clean catch mid-stream urine specimen
Treatment:
Other: Funnel
Other: Castile-soap wipe
D: Funnel + Silver-impregnated wipe
Description:
Urine collection funnel and sliver impregnated cloth-wipe given to patient to self-obtain a clean catch mid-stream urine specimen
Treatment:
Other: Funnel
Other: Silver Impregnated Wipe

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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