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Recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI) in the patients chronically catheterized are serious challenges clinically. The pathogens are often multidrug-resistant bacteria and such UTIs are actually biofilm infections. Currently standard antibiotic treatment against UTI in Denmark is sensitive antibiotic monotherapy. Theoretically antibiotic monotherapy is not a good treatment against biofilm infections. In the patients with impaired renal functions, both i.v. and p.o. antibiotic treatments function poor. Therefore, bladder lavage might help. In the study, the participants will be randomly divided into three groups (monotherapy, combination and bladder lavage). The investigators will evaluate the results and find a better treatment based on the clinical evidences, which might benefit the patients.
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Multidrug resistant bacterial infections are serious challenges that human beings are facing. Recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI) in the patients chronically catheterized is one of the examples. Urinary catheterization not only impair the urinary tract self-clean mechanism, but also provide the urinary pathogens an ideal surface to form bacterial biofilms, which have been demonstrated in vivo and in vitro impossible to be removed by only antibiotic treatments. Repeated antibiotic treatments could not help to remove urinary biofilm infections, but induction of antibiotic resistance.
Currently treatment against recurrent UTI in urinary catheterized patients includes antibiotic treatment and replacement of urinary catheter. Antibiotic treatment aims to remove the planktonic bacteria, control clinical symptoms and localize the infection in urinary tract, which will help to limit the bacteria in the catheter biofilm and benefit the replacement of the infected catheter. At present, standard antibiotic treatment against UTI in catheter carriers is sensitive antibiotic monotherapy according to the Danish guidelines on the use of antibiotics in the website "https://pro.medicin.dk/". However, these kinds of UTIs are usually biofilm infections, especially the urinary pathogen are quite often multiple-resistant. Therefore, some of the hospitals prefer combination antibiotic treatments according to the results from biofilm in vivo and in vitro researches. There are currently always arguments regarding monotherapy and combination antibiotic treatments. The investigators intends to observe and compare both treatments and try to clarify their respective advantages and disadvantages, which will benefit the clinical treatments and control of the antibiotic resistance in future. In addition, some of the patients have poor renal function, which reduce significantly the antibiotic concentration in urine. In such situation, bladder-antibiotic lavage might help. In the study, the patients will be randomly divided into three groups (monotherapy, combination and bladder lavage). The investigators will evaluate the results and find a better treatment based on the clinical evidences, which might benefit the patients.
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150 participants in 3 patient groups
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Zhijun Song, M.D., Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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