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Bacterial Metallophores in the Diagnosis of Acute Pyelonephritis

T

Thomayer University Hospital

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Acute Pyelonephritis
Complicated Urinary Tract Infection

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05674032
TUH00064190

Details and patient eligibility

About

The project aims to investigate bacterial metallophores as potential diagnostic markers of acute pyelonephritis and complicated urinary tract infections. These secondary metabolites are excreted by pathogenic microorganims in the course of infection for the uptake of iron and other metallic ions from the host. They are species-specific and can be detected in body fluids (including urine) by mass spectrometry. The potential contribution of this project is a culture-independent method for the diagnosis of the causative microbiological agent.

Full description

Acute pyelonephritis (AP) is a clinical syndrome characterized by fever, chills, nausea vomiting and costovertebral angle tenderness, bacteriuria and pyuria. The underlying pathophysiology is based on the presence of microbes in the renal parenchyma which may progress to sepsis. Complicated urinary tract infection (cUTI) is one accompanied by abnormalities of the urinary tract or host factors which make the eradication of the infection difficult.

The most common etiological agents include gram-negative enteric rods, i.e. E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae; and Enterococcus spp. Empirical antibiotic treatment should be targeted once culture and sensitivity results become available. This usually takes 24-48 hours, occasionally even 72 hours. Inadequate antibiotic treatment leads to higher mortality if the etiological agent is of a multi-drug resistant phenotype.

Metallophores are a major virulence factor of bacterial pathogens. These are chelating molecules secreted by the microbe for the uptake of iron, copper, and other metals from the host. E.g., siderophores aim at Fe3+ ions removal from the host protein molecules; the complex then adheres to specific extracellular receptors on the microbial cell and is internalized. Yersiniabactin is another metallophore which binds copper.

Proteomic analysis using mass spectrometry has been used in the detection of biomarkers for several pathological conditions: renal failure, post-transplant nephropathy, various malignancies etc. Metallophores can be detected by mass spectrometry.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • in-patient with clinical signs and symptoms of AP/cUTI or out-patient with clinical signs and symptoms of acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis or in-patient with no clinical signs of UTI and a negative standard urine culture result

Exclusion criteria

  • inability to consent

Trial design

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Cases
Description:
In-patients with AP or cUTI admitted for treatment to the hospital.
Control group 1
Description:
Out-patients seeking treatment for uncomplicated acute cystitis.
Control group 2
Description:
In-patients admitted to the ward without signs and symptoms of a urinary tract infection and with a negative urine culture result.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jan Hrbacek, PhD.; Roman Zachoval, Prof.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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