| Literature DB >> 34001538 |
Mina Bakhit1, Natalia Krzyzaniak1, Joanne Hilder2, Justin Clark1, Anna Mae Scott1, Chris Del Mar1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are often treated with antibiotics and are a source of antibiotic overuse. AIM: To systematically review randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of adult women in the community with a history of recurrent UTIs and who use methenamine hippurate prophylactically. DESIGN ANDEntities:
Keywords: antibiotics; methenamine hippurate; primary care; systematic review; urinary tract infections
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34001538 PMCID: PMC8136580 DOI: 10.3399/BJGP.2020.0833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Gen Pract ISSN: 0960-1643 Impact factor: 6.302
List of extracted information
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SD = standard deviation. UTI = urinary tract infection.
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram.
Figure 2.Risk of bias graph: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Characteristics of studies included in review
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| Brumfitt | UK | Two-arm, parallel | 110 (intervention: 35.9; comparator: 31.3) | 99 (intervention, | Intervention: mean 6.5 per 12 months; comparator: mean 6.6 per 12 months | Intervention: methenamine hippurate, 1 g, twice daily, 12 months | Comparator: nitrofurantoin, 50 mg, twice daily | 12 months |
| Brumfitt | UK | Three-arm, parallel | 67 (intervention: 38.2; comparator 1: 39.9; comparator 2: 31.7) | 64 (intervention, | Intervention: mean 4.9 per 12 months; comparator 1: mean 6.4 per 12 months; comparator 2: mean 5.2 per 12 months | Intervention: methenamine hippurate, 1 g, twice daily, 12 months | Comparator 1: trimethoprim, 100 mg, once nightly; comparator 2: povidone iodine, 10% solution diluted 15 mL to 240 mL water/antiseptic perineal wash, minimum twice daily | 12 months |
| Furness | Australia | Three-arm, parallel | 206 (all of childbearing age) | 206 (intervention 1, | NR | Intervention 1: methenamine hippurate, 1 g, twice daily, NR; intervention 2: methenamine mandelate, 1 g, four times daily, NR | Control: no treatment | 24 months |
| Gundersen | Norway | Two-arm, parallel | 30 (intervention: 74.5; comparator: 74.0) | 30 (intervention, | At least two in the previous 6 months | Intervention: methenamine hippurate, 1 tablet (dose NR), twice daily, 6 months | Placebo: one tablet, twice daily | 6 months |
| Høivik | Norway | Three-arm, cluster | 52 (intervention 1: 19.1; intervention 2: 28.9; comparator: 29.3) | 52 (intervention 1, | Intervention 1: mean 3.6 per 12 months; intervention 2: mean 4.1 per 12 months; comparator: mean 3.8 per 12 months | Intervention 1: methenamine hippurate, 1 tablet (dose NR), twice daily, 12 months; intervention 2: methenamine hippurate, 1 tablet (dose NR), once nightly, with one placebo tablet per 12 months | Placebo: two tablets, twice daily | 12 months |
| Botros | US | Two-arm, parallel | 92 (intervention: 70; comparator: 73) | 86 (intervention, | NR | Intervention: methenamine hippurate (dose NR) | Comparator: trimethoprim (dose NR) | 12 months |
This is the reported duration of the whole trial; however, the authors do not state the duration of the intervention.
Data extracted from the clinical trial registry record. NR = not reported. RCT = randomised controlled trial. UTI = urinary tract infection.
Figure 3.Prevention of UTI meta-analysed outcomes.
a Risk of bias: A = random sequence generation (selection bias); B = allocation concealment (selection bias); C = blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias); D = blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias); E = incomplete outcome data (attrition bias); F = selective reporting (reporting bias); and G = other bias. df = degrees of freedom. CI = confidence interval. IV = inverse variance. Log = natural logarithm. RR = rate ratio. SE = standard error. UTI = urinary tract infection.
Figure 4.Number of patients with adverse outcomes: methenamine hippurate versus comparator – sub-grouped by comparator type (any antibiotic, control).
Summary of findings: methenamine hippurate versus any antibiotic for the prevention of UTI
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| Patients remaining asymptomatic (follow-up: 6–12 months; assessed with number of patients that remained asymptomatic) | |||||||||||
| 3 | RCT | Serious | Serious | Not serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | 37/124 (29.8) | 49/106 (46.2) | 0.65 (0.40 to 1.07) | 162 fewer per 1000 (from 277 fewer to 32 more) | Very low |
| Patients remaining abacteriuric (follow-up: 12 months; assessed with number of patients that remained abacteriuric) | |||||||||||
| 2 | RCT | Serious | Not serious | Not serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | 53/81 (65.4) | 51/63 (81.0) | 0.80 (0.62 to 1.03) | 162 fewer per 1000 (from 308 fewer to 24 more) | Very low |
| Symptomatic UTI episodes (follow-up: 6–12 months; assessed with number of symptomatic UTI episodes) | |||||||||||
| 2 | RCT | Serious | Not serious | Serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | The pooled results of two RCTs on the number of symptomatic UTI episodes showed a trend of benefit for methenamine hippurate with a total RR of 1.95 (95% CI = 0.87 to 4.38) but the result was statistically insigificant with high heterogeneity ( | Very low | |||
| Bacteriuric UTI episodes (follow-up: 12 months; assessed with number of bacteriuric UTI episodes) | |||||||||||
| 2 | RCT | Serious | Not serious | Serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | The pooled results of two RCTs on the number of bacteriuric UTI episodes showed a non-statistically significant trend of benefit for methenamine hippurate with a total RR of 2.09 (95% CI = 0.72 to 6.09) with high heterogeneity ( | Very low | |||
| Any adverse outcomes (follow-up: 12 months; assessed with number of patients with a reported adverse outcome) | |||||||||||
| 3 | RCT | Serious | Serious | Not serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | 19/128 (14.8) | 30/127 (23.6) | 0.77 (0.11 to 5.46) | 54 fewer per 1000 (from 210 fewer to 1000 more) | Very low |
Setting: community, outpatient, and primary care.
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence — high: very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect; moderate: moderately confident in the effect estimate — the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect but there is a possibllity that it is substantially different; low: confidence in the effect estimate is limited — the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect; very low: little confidence in the effect estimate — the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect.
Allocation concealment and blinding of outcome assessment is unclear.
Unexplained heterogeneity. In Botros 2020: hippurate dose is not reported and could be different from the other included studies.
Small sample size.
Small number of studies hindered assessment of publication bias.
High heterogeneity.
Small number of events occurring in both groups. CI = confidence interval. RCT = randomised controlled trial. RR = risk ratio. UTI = urinary tract infection.
Summary of findings: methenamine hippurate versus control (placebo or antiseptic iodine perineal wash) for the prevention of UTI
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| Patients remaining asymptomatic (follow-up: 6–12 months; assessed with number of patients that remained asymptomatic) | |||||||||||
| 2 | RCT | Serious | Very serious | Not serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | 15/39 (38.5) | 14/33 (42.4) | 1.00 (0.27 to 3.66) | 0 fewer per 1000 (from 310 fewer to 1000 more) | Very low |
| Symptomatic UTI episodes (follow-up: 12 months; assessed with number of symptomatic UTI episodes) | |||||||||||
| 2 | RCT | Serious | Serious | Not serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | The pooled results of two RCTs on the number of symptomatic UTI episodes showed a non-statistically significant trend of benefit for methenamine hippurate with a total RR of 0.56 (95% CI = 0.13 to 2.35) with high heterogeneity ( | Very low | |||
| Any adverse outcomes (follow-up: 12 months; assessed with number of patients with a reported adverse outcome) | |||||||||||
| 2 | RCT | Serious | Not serious | Not serious | Serious | Publication bias strongly suspected | 6/55 (10.9) | 2/27 (7.4) | 1.32 (0.23 to 7.77) | 24 more per 1000 (from 57 fewer to 501 more) | Very low |
Setting: community, outpatient, and primary care.
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence — high: very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect; moderate: moderately confident in the effect estimate — the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect but there is a possibllity that it is substantially different; low: confidence in the effect estimate is limited — the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect; very low: little confidence in the effect estimate — the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect.
Allocation concealment and blindind of outcome assessment is unclear.
High heterogeneity as each study compared methenamine hippurate against a different control group.
Small sample size.
Small number of studies hindered assessment of publication bias.
High heterogeneity. CI = confidence interval. RCT = randomised controlled trial. RR = risk ratio. UTI = urinary tract infection.
How this fits in
| Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are often treated with antibiotics and are a major source of antibiotic overuse. In the interests of decreasing antibiotic prescribing, one alternative treatment is methenamine hippurate, which has reported benefits and a mild side-effect profile; however, its comparative effectiveness has not been widely explored. This study focused on the efficacy of methenamine hippurate compared with both control/no treatment and any antibiotic. Overall, the insufficiency of evidence precludes a firm recommendation on the use of methenamine hippurate prophylactically; however, there is enough evidence to warrant further research to investigate its benefits. |