Treatment Trials

61 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

Focus your search

COMPLETED
Liposomal Bupivacaine for Postoperative Pain Control in Urologic Procedures
Description

A prospective, randomized controlled study to determine the efficacy of liposomal bupivacaine given by local injection at all the wound sites in patients undergoing urologic surgeries.

COMPLETED
B3 Buddy for Securing Urinary Drainage Bag to Patient While Walking
Description

This clinical trial tests how well the Bag Below Bladder (B3) Buddy device works in securing urinary drainage bags while walking. Keeping a urinary drainage bag below the bladder is the standard of care to maintain urine flow and prevent urine from backing up into the bladder. Despite the use of modern urinary drainage bags for over 60 years, workarounds, including hooking the bag into pants pockets, are being used to secure the bags while walking. The B3 Buddy may help keep the urinary drainage bag at the proper level for drainage while walking.

RECRUITING
5-Alpha Reductase 2 as a Marker of Resistance to 5ARI Therapy
Description

The study is being conducted to learn why some patients with Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) do not respond to a commonly used treatment drug, Finasteride. The hope is to find ways to predict which patients will not respond to Finasteride so that, in the future, these patients can be identified prior to offering this treatment and they can be offered alternative treatment strategies in its place. The aim is to see if noninvasive techniques such as MRI can detect inflammation of the prostate to assist with early detection of those who will and who will not respond to Finasteride.

RECRUITING
Perioperative Testosterone Replacement Therapy for the Improvement of Post-Operative Outcomes in Patients With Low Testosterone
Description

This phase I trial investigates the safety of testosterone replacement therapy around the time of major urologic surgery (perioperative) in order to improve quality of life and post-operative outcomes such as decreased length of hospital stay, complications, and mortality in patients with low testosterone levels. Studies have demonstrated that patients undergoing testosterone replacement therapy have increased lean body mass, decreased fat mass and have improved physical function. Testosterone replacement therapy can also stimulate bone formation and may decrease the risk of fracture. Information from this trial may be used to support the incorporation of testosterone level testing and testosterone replacement into the perioperative treatment decision-making process.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Autologous Muscle Derived Cells Compared to Placebo for Urinary Sphincter Repair in Post-surgical Female Stress Incontinence
Description

This study evaluates the efficacy and safety of Autologous Muscle Derived Cells for Urinary Sphincter Repair (AMDC-USR; generic name: iltamiocel) compared to a placebo in the reduction of stress incontinence episode frequency in adult female patients with post-surgical persistent or recurrent stress urinary incontinence (SUI). Half of the participants will receive AMDC-USR (injections with cells) and the other half will receive placebo.

RECRUITING
Is Methenamine Prophylaxis for Urinary Tract Infection After Midurethral Sling As Effective As Antibiotic Prophylaxis?
Description

Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) affects at least 40% of women in the United States. Synthetic polypropylene mid-urethral slings (MUS) are the gold standard treatment for SUI. Post-operative urinary tract infections (UTI) are one of the most common complications after MUS placement. Some studies have demonstrated that MUS placement can increase the risk of UTI up to 21-34%. Post-operative UTI can lead to significant healthcare and patient burden. This additional burden further contributes to an estimated annual cost of $1.6 billion for UTI management in the United States. With increased antibiotic usage, there is simultaneous increase in bacterial resistance leading to treatment refractory UTI. The investigators prescribe post-operative antibiotics prophylactically for 3 days after MUS placement with or without concurrent pelvic reconstructive surgery based on prior literature recommending post-operative prophylaxis. There is a greater emphasis on limiting antibiotic use given the trend of development of bacterial resistance. There are studies supporting alternatives such as methenamine for recurrent UTI prophylaxis treatment, but there are limited studies evaluating methenamine for UTI prophylaxis after MUS.

COMPLETED
Clinical Validity and Utility of PCR Compared to Conventional Culture and Sensitivity Testing for the Management of Complicated Urinary Tract Infections in Adults
Description

Managing complicated urinary tract infections (cUTIs) poses significant challenges, often resulting in the over-prescription of empiric antibiotics. This approach exposes patients to multiple antimicrobials and raises the risk of inadequate treatment efficacy. The purpose of this study is to assess and compare the clinical utility of molecular testing (PCR) versus conventional culture and sensitivity (C\&S) in managing cUTI, to identify optimal management strategies for cUTI patients. This was a multi-center (6 sites in the united states), randomized, parallel, investigator-blinded, clinical trial to assess the clinical utility of PCR by comparing the diagnostic and therapeutic outcomes of PCR diagnostic methods to those of conventional C\&S in managing cUTIs in adults. All patients who met all the inclusion criteria and non of the exclusion criteria and signed an informed consent form were enrolled and randomized to one of two testing protocols used to guide treatment (PCR guided Arm, and C\&S guided Arm). Patients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio based on their unique sequential randomization numbers assigned at enrollment. Urine samples were collected from all patients and tested using both PCR and C\&S methods before randomization; however, investigators remained blinded to the comparator test results throughout the trial. To ensure unbiased treatment decisions, clinicians were blinded to the comparator test results. Treatment was prescribed solely based on the assigned test-PCR results for the PCR arm and C\&S results for the C\&S arm. The comparator test results remained blinded until the end of the study (EOS) Urine specimens were collected using a clean-catch midstream technique at two distinct time points-at baseline visit/before randomization (Day1) and at EOS visit (Day 28)-following targeted therapy based on the assigned diagnostic arm. Collected samples were immediately stored at 2-8 ◦C until analysis to preserve sample integrity. Upon receipt, urine samples were aliquoted for parallel testing, with one portion analyzed using PCR (QuantStudio 7 or 12 and KingFisher) and the other processed using C\&S methodologies. Molecular testing (Doc Lab UTM 2.0) involved qualitative PCR amplification targeting 28 uropathogen species and 16 classes of antibiotic resistance genes, covering both bacterial and fungal pathogens. All urine samples for urine C\&S were shipped to the central laboratory. The urine culture, isolation of uropathogen(s), initial identification of pathogen(s), and bacterial counts in urine were conducted in the central laboratory. The urine samples were cultured and quantified using a calibrated loop to identify a quantitative count of bacteria at a lower limit of 10\^5 CFU/mL. All purified pathogen(s) were further analyzed for species identification and antimicrobial sensitivity The primary endpoint was the number (and percentage) of subjects in each study arm with favorable clinical outcomes (FCl) at the EOS visit. The FCl was defined as a patient's clinical response, assessed by the treating investigator, indicating either clinical improvement or cure. Clinical improvement was defined as the resolution of at least one symptom of cUTI present at baseline, absence of new cUTI symptoms, and/or avoidance of parenteral antibiotic therapy following randomization. Clinical cure was defined as the complete resolution of all acute signs and symptoms of cUTI present at baseline, to the extent that no further antimicrobial therapy (either IV or oral) was required for the treatment of the cUTI. The secondary endpoint included several assessments: * Number (and percentage) of subjects with microbiological eradication at the EOS, defined as achieving a quantitative urine culture at the EOS indicating a reduction of all uro-pathogens present at baseline to \<10\^5 colony forming unit per milliliter (CFU/mL) and the absence of baseline pathogens detected by EOS urine PCR (Cq \> 33); * Subjective measurement of treating investigator satisfaction score through a questionnaire at EOS, evaluated factors such as the ease of interpreting the test result, its availability, and its usefulness in clinical decision-making and patient management compared to the comparator; * Comparison of turnaround time between molecular diagnostic procedures and conventional diagnostic * Overall agreeability between the diagnostic results generated by PCR versus C\&S as assessed by discordant analysis * Assessment of the favorable clinical outcome of patients with discordant results \[PCR(+), CS(-) and PCR(-), CS(+)\]

NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Methenamine Hippurate Following Intradetrusor OnabotulinumtoxinA Injection
Description

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare methenamine hippurate prophylaxis to routine antibiotic prophylaxis following onabotulinumtoxinA (BOTOX-A) injections in women with overactive bladder (OAB). Participants will be randomly selected to receive one of the two post-procedural prophylaxis medications. The primary outcome measure will be urinary tract infection (UTI) rates within 30 days from the BOTOX-A procedure. Secondary outcomes will assess patient satisfaction with the two post-procedural prophylaxis medications.

COMPLETED
Diagnosis of Subclinical Urinary Tract Infections Using Advanced Microbiome Survey Techniques in High Risk Trauma Patients
Description

The purpose of this study is to see if the investigators can identify early those patients who are admitted to the hospital and have a urinary tract infection (UTI) or those patients that develop a UTI during their hospitalization.

COMPLETED
A Biochip for Rapid Diagnosis of Complicated Urinary Tract Infection
Description

The purpose of this proposal is clinical validation of an electrochemical biochip for rapid pathogen identification and antibiotic susceptibility determination.

NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Diagnosis and Treatment of Urinary Tract Infection Using DNA Polymerase Chain Reaction Versus Urine Culture
Description

Adults 18 years or older with urinary tract infection (UTI) symptoms. Participants will be assigned to either the urine culture group or the DNA PCR study group by randomization. At time of enrollment in the study they will be also asked to fill out two questionnaires. If prescribed antibiotics for treatment of a UTI, participants will then be called the day after they are scheduled to stop their antibiotics. Participants will be asked to fill out questionnaires the day after finishing antibiotics. Participants will be enrolled in the study for a maximum of 21 days.

RECRUITING
PRescription Exercise for Older Men With Urinary Disease
Description

This is a single-center pilot randomized controlled trial among 68 physically "inactive" older men with lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) attributed to benign prostatic hyperplasia (LUTS/BPH) assessing a 12-week remote exercise intervention versus health education control.

RECRUITING
Antibiotics for Delirium in Older Adults With No Clear Urinary Tract Infection
Description

Delirium is an acute confusional state that is experienced by many older adults who are admitted to hospital. To treat delirium the underlying cause needs to be identified promptly, but this is challenging. One of the potential causes of delirium is infection. Urine tests show that most patients experiencing delirium have bacteria in their urine, however, bacteria in the urine is common among older adults, and does not automatically indicate an infection is present. As a result it is difficult to know whether a lower urinary tract infection is present as individuals with delirium are frequently unable to report clinical signs of infection - symptoms of pain or discomfort with urination, having to urinate more frequently or pelvic discomfort. Very often, individuals with delirium are treated with antibiotics despite the fact that it is unknown whether antibiotics help to improve delirium in cases where bacteria in the urine is present. This proposed study is a randomized controlled trial that will examine if adults (age 60 or older) with delirium and suspected infection benefit from taking antibiotics.

RECRUITING
Patient Satisfaction of Virtual vs In-Person Workup and Treatment of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms.
Description

This study is being done to compare usefulness of data collected in uroflowmetry, a test that measures the amount of urine released from the body, at home versus in the doctor's office. Additionally, investigators are assessing patient satisfaction when completing a virtual visit for lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), related to prostatic enlargement, compared to an in person visit. The three devices being investigated have not been used in the home setting to make urinary measurements as is typically done in clinic. The goal is to test the effectiveness and accuracy of these devices compared to our standard clinical practices and demonstrate their ability to provide useful information in the home setting.

COMPLETED
Diagnosis, Antibiotic Prescribing Practices and Outcomes of cUTI in an Outpatient Setting
Description

This prospective, multicenter, comparative cohort observational study is to determine if Guidance® UTI pathway compared to traditional diagnostic pathways reduces the rates of empiric antibiotic therapy, adverse events, and improves therapeutic accuracy of treatment

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
A Study of Vaccination With 9-valent Extraintestinal Pathogenic Escherichia Coli Vaccine (ExPEC9V) in the Prevention of Invasive Extraintestinal Pathogenic Escherichia Coli Disease in Adults Aged 60 Years And Older With a History of Urinary Tract Infection in the Past 2 Years
Description

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of 9-valent extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli vaccine (ExPEC9V) compared to placebo in the prevention of the first invasive extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli disease (IED) event caused by ExPEC9V O-serotypes.

WITHDRAWN
Evaluating UTI Diagnosis in Nursing Homes
Description

This prospective, multicenter, comparative cohort observational study is to determine whether the use of Guidance® UTI Clinical Pathway, a standardized infrastructure for specimen collection and result delivery, compared with current traditional pathways for urine testing reduces the proportion of UTI patients with poor outcomes.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Impact of COVID-19 on GU Disease
Description

The purpose of this research study is to identify patients with GU disease with active or past COVID-19 infection. Participants will be asked to: * Complete an Online COVID-19 Questionnaire. * Disclose if the patient has or had Genitourinary cancer or benign urologic condition * Provide urine specimen for research * Provide 4 tablespoons of blood for testing blood for research. * Provide permission to access medical records, such as patient lab results, medical history, imaging reports, etc.

TERMINATED
Radiation Therapy on Pelvic Floor Disorders in Women
Description

Investigators propose a retrospective cohort study to examine the impact of radiation therapy on the global pelvic floor function of women who have completed the immediate surveillance period for colorectal cancer

COMPLETED
Efficacy and Safety of Gefapixant (MK-7264) in Women With Chronic Cough and Stress Urinary Incontinence (MK-7264-042)
Description

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of gefapixant, in improving symptoms of cough-induced stress urinary incontinence (SUI) in adult female participants with refractory or unexplained chronic cough. The primary hypothesis is that gefapixant is superior to placebo in reducing the frequency of cough-induced SUI episodes over 12 weeks.

Conditions
COMPLETED
A Study of a Renal Autologous Cell Therapy (REACT) in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) From Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract (CAKUT).
Description

A phase 1, open-label safety, tolerability and early efficacy study of a Renal Autologous Cell Therapy (REACT) in patients with Chronic Kidney Disease from Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract (CAKUT) (REGEN-004)

COMPLETED
TriVerity in the Diagnosis and Prognosis of Emergency Department Patients With Suspected Infections and Suspected Sepsis
Description

This study will analyze gene expression and other laboratory data from biological samples collected from participants with suspected respiratory, urinary, intra-abdominal, and/or skin \& soft tissue infections; or suspected sepsis of any cause.

COMPLETED
Brain Imaging in Men With Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms
Description

Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) affects the storage and voiding phases of the micturition cycle. Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) refers to storage symptoms such as urinary frequency, urgency, urge urinary incontinence and nocturia. Surgical options for bladder outlet obstruction (BOO), including prostate ablation and transurethral resection, are currently offered for symptomatic improvement. However, 30% of patients report persistent LUTS after BOO procedures. Neuroplasticity induced by BPH and BOO can be contributory of persistent LUTS in these men, having different brain activation patterns during the micturition cycle. The investigators proposed unique multimodal functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) study that will identify for the first time, structural and functional brain contributions to LUTS in men with BPH and BOO at baseline and following BOO procedures. The investigators hypothesize that men with symptomatic BPH who have persistent LUTS following BOO procedures have a distinct brain activation pattern in Regions of Interest (RoI) that regulate the micturition cycle.

COMPLETED
HostDx Sepsis in the Diagnosis and Prognosis of Emergency Department Patients With Suspected Infections: a Multicenter Pilot Study
Description

This study will analyze gene expression data (HostDx Sepsis test) from blood samples collected from participants with suspected infections. The primary endpoint of the study is to prospectively validate the HostDx Sepsis test for infections. As a secondary endpoint the correlation of participant prognosis and gene expression results in the HostDx Sepsis test will be validated. Participants presenting to the emergency departments of enrolling sites with a suspected infection and 1 vital signs OR suspected sepsis and 2 vital sign changes as stated in the protocol are meeting enrollment criteria

COMPLETED
Enhancing Behavioral Treatment for Women With Pelvic Floor Disorders
Description

The purpose of this proposal is to test a novel behavioral treatment - Unified Protocol Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (UP-CBT)1 - to enhance quality of life in women with pelvic floor disorders. Emotional distress is treatable using behavioral procedures, and effective treatment would increase women's emotional health and help to reduce urinary symptoms (e.g., incontinence, frequent urination). Women with pelvic floor disorders are often seen in the urogynecology clinic, which makes this setting ideal for offering additional interventions that may improve their quality of life. Unfortunately, many women with pelvic floor disorders may not receive effective behavioral treatment, such as cognitive behavior therapy, because urogynecologists and other medical professionals may not be aware of providers in their community who offer this treatment. The investigators will enhance treatment options by 1) providing evidence for an all-purpose cognitive-behavioral intervention (i.e., UP-CBT), 2) offering treatment in the urogynecology clinic, maximizing convenience, and 3) improving clinical outcomes for these patients. Specific Aims: 1. To demonstrate that UP-CBT is an effective form of therapy for women with lower urinary tract symptoms. 2. To use baseline characteristics in moderation analyses to determine which women will be most likely to have a good response to therapy. 3. To use mediation analyses to test a possible causal chain of events - Does treatment lead to lower anxiety, which in turn leads to fewer urinary symptoms?

COMPLETED
Gentamicin Bladder Instillations to Prevent Urinary Tract Infections in Patients With Spinal Cord Injury
Description

A non-randomized study evaluating the efficacy of intravesical gentamicin on the occurrence rate of urinary tract infections and bladder complications in patients after spinal cord injury (SCI), and to assess its effectiveness in promoting overall quality of life (QOL), community living, and participation.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
ROBUST III- Re-Establishing Flow Via Drug Coated Balloon For The Treatment Of Urethral Stricture Disease
Description

ROBUST III is a prospective, multi-center, randomized controlled adaptive sample size clinical trial to establish the safety and effectiveness for the Optilume Stricture Drug Coated Balloon (DCB).

TERMINATED
HD5 Levels in Catheter Versus Bag Urine Specimens in Young Children for the Diagnosis of UTI
Description

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a common cause of bacteremia and serious bacterial infections in young children (2-24 months of age). Because these children are usually unable to say what symptoms they are experiencing, UTIs are diagnosed through testing. Current testing of urine samples require a catheter or suprapubic aspiration performed for urine collection for infections markers to be reliable. Bag specimens often have varying results that can be poor in sensitivity and specificity depending on what component of the urine test one is looking at. Catheter and aspiration testing can be anxiety-provoking to parents, be painful for patients and even introduce bacteria into the bladder. An antimicrobial peptide called alpha human defensin-5 (HD5) is produced by the uroepithelium in response to infection. HD5 has been studied in the urine and does increase in actual UTIs. This study will look at children 1 to 24 months of age and again study levels of HD5 in culture positive UTIs versus urine negative for UTI. This study will also determine if collection method alters HD5 levels. We will measure HD5 levels in the urine from a bag specimen and a catheter specimen in the same patient. Our primary objective is to determine the sensitivity and specificity of HD5 measured in urine collected by bag and catheter in the same patient for the diagnosis of UTI in children between the age 1 to 24 months presenting with febrile illness and suspected UTI.

TERMINATED
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for Inflammatory Conditions of the Urinary Bladder
Description

Pilot study to determine feasibility for treating patients with two chronic inflammatory conditions of the urinary bladder: chronic interstitial cystitis and recurrent urinary tract infections using a standardized hyperbaric oxygen treatment plan. Presently there are no good treatments for these conditions and hyperbaric oxygen may be a safe and readily accessible therapy as it has proven successful an another type of chronic inflammatory condition of the urinary bladder known as "radiation cystitis". The study will determine if patients will consider this an acceptable treatment for their conditions and that it is well tolerated.

COMPLETED
ROBUST I Pilot Study, Re-Establishing Flow Via Drug Coated Balloon For The Treatment Of Urethral Stricture Disease
Description

Robust I study is a feasibility study for evaluating the safety and efficacy of DCB.