Alternative to prophylactic antibiotics for the treatment of recurrent urinary tract infections in women: multicentre, open label, randomised, non-inferiority trial

Author:

Harding ChrisORCID,Mossop Helen,Homer Tara,Chadwick Thomas,King William,Carnell Sonya,Lecouturier Jan,Abouhajar Alaa,Vale Luke,Watson Gillian,Forbes Rebecca,Currer Stephanie,Pickard Robert,Eardley Ian,Pearce Ian,Thiruchelvam Nikesh,Guerrero Karen,Walton Katherine,Hussain Zahid,Lazarowicz Henry,Ali Ased

Abstract

Abstract Objective To test and compare the efficacy of methenamine hippurate for prevention of recurrent urinary tract infections with the current standard prophylaxis of daily low dose antibiotics. Design Multicentre, open label, randomised, non-inferiority trial. Setting Eight centres in the UK, recruiting from June 2016 to June 2018. Participants Women aged ≥18 years with recurrent urinary tract infections, requiring prophylactic treatment. Interventions Random assignment (1:1, using permuted blocks of variable length via a web based system) to receive antibiotic prophylaxis or methenamine hippurate for 12 months. Treatment allocation was not masked and crossover between arms was allowed. Main outcome measure Absolute difference in incidence of symptomatic, antibiotic treated, urinary tract infections during treatment. A patient and public involvement group predefined the non-inferiority margin as one episode of urinary tract infection per person year. Analyses performed in a modified intention-to-treat population comprised all participants observed for at least six months. Results Participants were randomly assigned to antibiotic prophylaxis (n=120) or methenamine hippurate (n=120). The modified intention-to-treat analysis comprised 205 (85%) participants (antibiotics, n=102 (85%); methenamine hippurate, n=103 (86%)). Incidence of antibiotic treated urinary tract infections during the 12 month treatment period was 0.89 episodes per person year (95% confidence interval 0.65 to 1.12) in the antibiotics group and 1.38 (1.05 to 1.72) in the methenamine hippurate group, with an absolute difference of 0.49 (90% confidence interval 0.15 to 0.84) confirming non-inferiority. Adverse reactions were reported by 34/142 (24%) in the antibiotic group and 35/127 (28%) in the methenamine group and most reactions were mild. Conclusion Non-antibiotic prophylactic treatment with methenamine hippurate might be appropriate for women with a history of recurrent episodes of urinary tract infections, informed by patient preferences and antibiotic stewardship initiatives, given the demonstration of non-inferiority to daily antibiotic prophylaxis seen in this trial. Trial registration ISRCTN70219762 .

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Engineering

Reference18 articles.

1. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Guideline NG112, Urinary tract infection (recurrent): antimicrobial prescribing 2018. https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng112/resources/urinary-tract-infection-recurrent-antimicrobial-prescribing-pdf-66141595059397

2. European Association of Urology. EAU Guidelines – Urological Infections. Edn. presented at the EAU Annual Congress, Amsterdam, the Netherlands 2020. ISBN 978-94-92671-07-3.

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