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Yeast vaginitis is a very common ailment affecting premenopausal women in Nigeria. This condition is more prevalent in the age group between 21-30 years. More than 75% of premenopausal women and university students are diagnosed with yeast infections annually. In most of these women, recurrent rate of vaginal candidiasis with empiric therapy, stands between 70 and 80%. In addition, resistance to anti-fungal agents is increasing at an alarming speed, particularly with species other than Candida albicans such as C tropicalis and C glabrata. The healthy vaginal environment is composed mainly of lactobacilli and when these organisms are suppressed overgrowth of a large number of pathogens occur including yeasts. In this pilot study,we hypothesize that oral administration of two well documented strains of lactobacilli (L.rhamnosis GR-1 and L.reuteri RC-14 ) given to women with recurrent yeast vaginitis, following standard therapy with fluconazole will result in a significant reduction in recurrence rate of the disease.
Full description
STUDY HYPOTHESIS The administration of two well documented strains of lactobacilli (L.rhamnosis GR-1 and L.reuteri RC-14 ) given to women with recurrent yeast vaginitis, following standard therapy with fluconazole and compared with placebo will result in a significant reduction in recurrence rate of the disease.
Methodology
Study participants
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
Laboratory Diagnosis:
Microscopic examination of vaginal secretion in 10% KOH for hyphae and mycelia Culture for fungal agent using Sabbraoud agar/broth.
Randomisation:
• Participants randomised for age, history of previous (past year) yeast vaginitis.
Treatment Protocol 100 premenopausal women presenting with acute yeast vaginitis and a past history of 3 or 4 episodes of yeast vaginitis over the past 12 months will be treated with one oral dose of Fluconazole (Diflucan), then randomized into 2 groups:
Both groups of patients will be followed at 7days for proof of cure, 1 month, 2 months and 3 months following enrolment.
At all follow-up visits, the patients will be checked for symptoms and examined physically. Vaginal swabs will be tested for fungi microscopically and by culture, and BV organisms using Nugent scoring or with BV Blue test kit for vaginal sialidase.
Data to be collected
Symptoms:
Vaginal swabs - two per visit:
Day 0 (before treatment)
Day 7 (Proof of cure for the two groups).
Statistical Analysis
In the placebo group of patients, it is anticipated that at the 3 month period, a recurrence rate of 50% will occur, whereas, in the treatment arm a reduction in recurrence to 25% will be achieved. The study is designed to have a power of 80% and to detect a reduction in recurrence at two-sided 5% significance level.
Participants Recruitment:
Subjects will be recruited from the women attending urogenital tract infection clinics at Faith Mediplex, Benin City.
Risk No risks are expected except the usual adverse effects associated with Fluconazole, otherwise probiotic lactobacilli are generally regarded as safe (GRAS) and no known side effects have been attributed to probiotic lactobacilli in immunocompetent individuals.
Benefits There may be benefits accruing from the probiotic arm of the study as recurrence rate may be low than the placebo. Also there may not be any direct benefit, but information gathered will help us in evaluating whether oral use of probiotics could be practically applicable in our environment against vaginal yeast infections.
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Central trial contact
Martin U Duru, MSc; Kingsley C Anukam, PhD, MHPM
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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