Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The study will enroll healthy pre-menopausal female volunteers in the community. These subjects will act as their own controls. The subjects will collect voided urine and peri-urethral swab specimens daily for several months. They will also be asked to collect vaginal and peri-rectal swab specimens at various time points. Subjects will document various lifestyle variables daily. During the middle of the study, subjects will be randomized to probiotic vs placebo. Using bacterial culture and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, the study will measure the bacterial populations of several anatomic sites longitudinally: voided urine, peri-urethra, vagina, and peri-rectal. The study hypothesizes that oral probiotic usage will alter the bacterial populations and ratio of Lactobacillus to E. coli within each of these sites. Additionally, the study hypothesizes that the changes within each site will occur first in the rectum (i.e. GI tract), followed by the vagina, and then the urethra and bladder.
Using the prospective design of daily sampling and lifestyle variable documentation, the study may be able to identify possible influences on microbiome stability within the sampled sites. The lifestyle variables recorded include: diet, medication usage, menstruation, sexual activity, and alcohol consumption.
This pilot study will establish the variance of the outcome variables among healthy women and confirm the emergence of the probiotic with the recommended dose. With this information, future researchers will be able to calculate the power needed for a larger randomized trial. This trial would also randomize patients who may be at risk for a UTI to receive a probiotic vs placebo. The primary outcome measurement will be the change in the ratio of Lactobacillus to E. coli. As a secondary aim, the study will evaluate the incidence of UTI in the patients.
Full description
In this study, the primary aim is to identify the change in the Lactobacillus E. coli ratio within the lower urinary tract, the vagina, and the peri-rectal area in response to an oral probiotic as well as to evaluate the stability of these changes following cessation of an oral probiotic. Voided urine and peri-urethral, vaginal, and peri-rectal swab samples will be analyzed for their Lactobacillus E. coli ratio using bacterial culture as well as 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing. The study will compare the ratios present before, during, and after oral probiotic usage. The study will also compare the change in ratios between subjects taking the oral probiotic and those taking an oral placebo.
A secondary aim is to identify the normal daily changes (i.e. stability) in the bacterial populations within the voided urine, including whether host intrinsic (e.g. diet, hygiene, and sexual activity) and extrinsic (e.g. menstruation) factors affect the stability of bacterial populations. The bacterial populations defining the voided urine samples will be correlated to various daily subject-reported lifestyle variables. These include diet, hygiene, sexual activity, medication usage, alcohol usage, menstruation, and urinary-related symptoms. These lifestyle variables will be recorded each day for the entire duration of the study.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
8 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal