| Literature DB >> 22760907 |
Marcelo Hisano1, Homero Bruschini, Antonio Carlos Nicodemo, Miguel Srougi.
Abstract
Lower urinary tract infections are very common diseases. Recurrent urinary tract infections remain challenging to treat because the main treatment option is long-term antibiotic prophylaxis; however, this poses a risk for the emergence of bacterial resistance. Some options to avoid this risk are available, including the use of cranberry products. This article reviews the key methods in using cranberries as a preventive measure for lower urinary tract infections, including in vitro studies and clinical trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22760907 PMCID: PMC3370320 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2012(06)18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
In vitro activity of cranberries against bacteria.
| Study | N | Study design | Cranberry preparation | Micro-organism | Results |
| Pinzon-Arango et al., 2009 | - | PAC of 0, 64, 128 and 345.8 µg/ml | |||
| Lee et al., 2010 | Phase 1, N = 20 (16 women, 4 men); phase 2 (7 women, 2 men) N = 9. | 275 mg of whole, dry cranberries and 25 mg of concentrated, dry cranberries | Phase 1: anti-adhesion activity in 35% ( | ||
| Lavigne et al., 2007 | N = 8 females | 36 mg cranberry capsules of; daily dosage was 36 or 108 mg or placebo | Dose-dependent effect on anti-adhesion activity ( | ||
| Gupta et al., 2007 | Cranberry capsule with 2.7 mg of PAC diluted from 0 to 75 µg/ml | Dose-dependent effect on anti-adhesion activity of PAC against | |||
| Howell et al., 2010 | N = 32 females | Multicentric, randomized, double-blind | Cranberry capsule of 0, 18, 36 or 72 mg of PAC | Dose-dependent effect of anti-adhesion activity increasing with the amount of PAC. Virulence was also reduced with PAC in a dose-dependent fashion. | |
| Valentova et al., 2007 | N = 65 females | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 400 mg or 1200 mg per day of dried cranberry juice | Anti-adhesion activity in a dose-dependent fashion ( | |
| Di Martino et al., 2006 | N = 20 (10 males, 10 females) | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 250 or 750 ml of 27% cranberry juice | Dose-dependent decreases in bacterial adhesion to human epithelial cell line of 45% and 62% for 250 and 750 ml of cranberry juice, respectively ( |
Clinical trials of cranberry products for UTI prevention in different populations.
| Study | N | Study design | Treatment | Results |
| Walker et al., 1997 | 19 young women with recurrent UTIs | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover trial | 400 mg of cranberry capsules | Withdrawal rate of 47.4%. UTI incidences were 2.4/subject-year-cranberry and 6.0/subject-year-placebo ( |
| Stothers, 2002 | 150 women with recurrent UTIs | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 250 ml pure cranberry juice or concentrated cranberry tablets | UTIs were 72% (placebo), 30% (juice; |
| Barbosa-Cesnik, 2010 | 319 young women with previous UTIs | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 8 oz. of 27% cranberry juice | Recurrence rates of UTIs were 19.3% for cranberry treatment and 14.6% for placebo ( |
| Kontiokari et al., 2001 | 150 young women with previous UTIs | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 50 ml of cranberry-lingonberry juice (7.5 g of cranberries); | 20% reduction in UTIs in cranberry group. Recurrence rate of UTIs lower in cranberry group (at six months, |
| McMurdo et al., 2005 | 376 hospitalized patients older than 60 years | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 150 ml of cranberry juice (25%) and placebo | Withdrawal rate of 31%. Symptomatic UTI incidences of 7.4% with placebo and 3.7% with cranberry ( |
| Avorn et al., 1994 | 153 elderly women | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 300 ml/day of cranberry juice and placebo | Bacteriuria in 28.1% in placebo group and 15% in cranberry group (no significance). OR of 0.42 for bacteriuria in cranberry. |
| McMurdo et al., 2009 | 137 women aged >45 years with recurrent UTIs | Double-blind, randomized controlled trial | 500 mg of cranberry extract or 100 mg of trimethoprim | 25 UTIs in the cranberry group and 14 in the trimethoprim group; relative risk 1.616, |
| Wing et al., 2008 | 188 pregnant women; gestation of <16 weeks | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 240 mg of cranberry juice (27%) 3 times/day (group A) or 240 mg once daily (group B) or placebo (group C) | Withdrawal rate of 38.8% (A 50.7%; B 39.7%; C 55.5%). No significant differences between the groups ( |
| Lee et al., 2007 | 305 patients with neurogenic bladder due to spinal cord injury | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | Group 1- methenamine hippurate (MH); 2- cranberry 800 mg; 3- MH + cranberry; and 4- placebo | No differences for symptomatic UTIs comparing groups of intervention to placebo. |
| Mc Guinness et al., 2002 | 135 patients with neurogenic bladder due to multiple sclerosis | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 8000 mg of cranberry capsules or placebo | 34.6% contracted a UTI on cranberries and 32.4% on placebo ( |
| Waites et al., 2004 | 74 patients with neurogenic bladder due to spinal cord injury | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 1 g of cranberry capsules or placebo | 26 patients withdrew. No differences in bacteriuria, pyuria or symptomatic UTIs. |
| Linsenmeyer et al., 2004 | 37 patients with neurogenic bladder due to spinal cord injury | Double-blind, placebo-controlled with crossover | 400 mg of cranberry tablets for 4 weeks or placebo | 16 patients withdrew. No reductions in bacteriuria or pyuria with cranberry. |
| Foda et al., 1995 | 40 neurogenic bladder children under intermittent catheterization | Single-blind, randomized with crossover | Cranberry juice 15 mg/kg/day or water | 19 children withdrew. No differences between groups for asymptomatic bacteriuria or UTIs. |
| Schlager et al., 1999 | 15 children with myelomeningocele under intermittent catheterization | Double-blind placebo-controlled with crossover | Cranberry juice 60 ml/day or placebo | No significant differences between groups regarding bacteriuria or symptomatic UTI. |
| Ferrara et al., 2009 | 84 girls with recurrent UTIs | Randomized controlled | Cranberry-lingonberry juice 50 ml/day (n = 27); | UTIs in 18.5% (5/27) of patients in the first group versus 42.3% in the second and 48.1% in the control group ( |