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Etiology Study of Prostatitis

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University of British Columbia

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Prostatitis

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01932645
H13-01947

Details and patient eligibility

About

Prostatitis is so widespread a disease that affects people from youths to seniors, with approximately a third experiencing a remission of symptoms over a year follow-up. Although the etiology of prostatitis is still not clear, it is mainly thought to be due to infection of bacteria or other microorganisms. Up to now, there is still no research being done on the microbiome (bacterial species) of the prostate. The objective of this study is to look at the etiology of chronic prostatitis(bacteria or non-bacteria prostatitis), mainly focusing on the effect of bacteria in the prostate.

Full description

Prostatitis is so widespread a disease that affects people from youths to seniors, with approximately a third experiencing a remission of symptoms over a year follow-up. Although the etiology of prostatitis is still not clear, it is mainly thought to be due to infection of bacteria or other microorganisms. Traditional techniques to identify bacteria (e.g. on agar petri plates) are limited in what they can identify. Although HMP (Human Microbiome Project) has turned many mysteries into common sense, little is done on the relationship of bacteria in the prostate for prostatitis. Up to now, there is still no research being done on the microbiome (bacterial species) of the prostate. The objective of this study is to look at the etiology of chronic prostatitis (bacteria or non-bacteria prostatitis), mainly focusing on the effect of bacteria in the prostate. Modern sequencing methods, such as 16s rRNA amplification, cloning and sequencing will be used to evaluate the role of bacteria in prostatitis. The basic idea is to survey the microbes present in expressed prostatic fluid using 16s sequencing to compare healthy men and prostatitis patients in a small cohort to see if there are correlations between microbes found and symptoms.

Enrollment

24 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

19+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • chronic prostatitis (bacteria or non-bacterial prostatitis) with pelvic pain and LUTS (low urinary tract symptom); diagnosed mainly by NIH-CPSI score. We use NIH-CPSI score 15 as a base line for identifying prostatitis patients:those scored more than 15 will be grouped as prostatitis patients.

Exclusion criteria

  • Inadequate follow-up data
  • Other types of prostatits patients
  • Patients who in the opinion of the investigators would not be suitable for study
  • UTI patients (within 6 months before enrolment)
  • Antibiotics (within 6 months before enrolment)
  • Urinary tract surgery (within 6 months before enrolment)

Trial design

24 participants in 2 patient groups

Prostatitis patients
Description:
We will enroll patients from the outpatient clinic who are suffering from pelvic pain (perineal, suprapubic, testicular, penile etc), have urinary symptoms and sexual dysfunction (primarily pain associated with ejaculation). Patients with these symptoms and identified as having prostatitis will be approached to enroll.
Controls
Description:
Male patients seen in the outpatient clinic who do not have prostatitis (not suffering from pelvic pain (perineal, suprapubic, testicular, penile etc), and do not have urinary symptoms and sexual dysfunction (primarily pain associated with ejaculation)) will be approached to enrol as controls.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Olga Arsovska; Guangming Yin

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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