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Urinary Tract Infection in Pregnancy

A

Assiut University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Urinary Tract Infections

Treatments

Other: Talking a urine sample

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04244526
Urinary tract infection

Details and patient eligibility

About

  • to describe the profile of uropathogenic E coli from Egyptian pregnant women with UTIs and a symptomatic bacteriuria.
  • to determine the susceptibility pattern of our local isolated UPEC strains which is essential for optimal management of UTI.
  • to evaluate the different virulence genes in UPEC isolates and their association with antibiotic resistance.
  • to track common UPEC serogroups.
  • to investigate the biofilm formation and the relationship between virulence genes and biofilm formation in UPEC strains isolated from patients.

Full description

Urinary tract infection represents the most common bacterial infection in pregnancy and the third common cause of human infection after respiratory and intestinal infections. The infection can be life threatening and associated with serious complications. UTI can be associated with defined symptoms'symptomatic' or without symptoms 'asymptomatic'. Asymptomatic bacteriuria is defined as the presence of >100000 colony forming units/ml of urine of a single pathogen in two consecutive midstream clean catch urine specimen or on catheterization specimen from an individual without signs or symptoms associated with urinary or genital organs. Asymptomatic bacteriuria can lead to acute pyelonephritis in30%of pregnant women and complications such as early delivery, increase risk of hypertension, pre-eclampsia, low birth weight and postpartum endometritis. Ecoli accounts for most cases of symptomatic and asymptomatic bacteriuria in women, representing70 _90 %of the cases. The important virulence factors of uropathogenic ecoli can be broadly divided into two groups :bacterial cell surface factors and secreted factors. The emergence of drug resistant microorganism among Uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains increases the serious threat to global health. Ecoli often acquired genes coding for antibiotic resistance, beta-lactamase enzymes are the most frequent and play a key role, conferring resistance of bacteria to beta lactam antibiotic group such as penicillin and cephalosporins. Therefore, knowledge regarding local prevalence of uropathogenic ecoli and antimicrobial resistance is essential for optimal management of UTI.

Enrollment

155 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • pregnant women who diagnosed through clinical examination and urine analysis. 3 groups : group 1 pregnant women with cystitis Group 2 pregnant women with Pyelonephritis Group 3 pregnant women with asymptomatic bacteriuria

Exclusion criteria

  • pregnant women on antibiotics _Patients with any anatomical abnormalities in the urinary tract

Trial design

155 participants in 3 patient groups

Group1
Description:
Group 1:pregnant women with cystitis
Treatment:
Other: Talking a urine sample
Group2
Description:
Group 2: pregnant women with Pyelonephritis
Treatment:
Other: Talking a urine sample
Group3
Description:
Group 3: pregnant women with asymptomatic bacteriuria
Treatment:
Other: Talking a urine sample

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Noura Samir Hussein, Demonstrator

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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