| Literature DB >> 35052890 |
Tommaso Cai1,2, Umberto Anceschi3, Irene Tamanini1, Serena Migno4, Michele Rizzo5, Giovanni Liguori5, Alejandro Garcia-Larrosa6, Alessandro Palmieri7, Paolo Verze8, Vincenzo Mirone7, Truls E Bjerklund Johansen2,9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the era of antibiotic resistance, an antibiotic-sparing approach presents an interesting alternative treatment of uncomplicated cystitis in women. Our aim is to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to compare the effectiveness and safety profile of a medical device containing xyloglucan, hibiscus and propolis (XHP) in women with uncomplicated cystitis.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; hibiscus; mucoprotection; propolis; review; urinary tract infection; uropathogens; xyloglucan
Year: 2021 PMID: 35052890 PMCID: PMC8773311 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11010014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1The figure shows the papers’ selection process according to PRISMA recommendations.
The table shows all characteristics of all pre-clinical and non-randomized clinical studies. List of abbreviations used in table: MD = medical device; RGHP = reticulated-gelatin hibiscus and propolis; RG = reticulated gelatin (RGHP); SRR = symptomatic recurrence reduction; UTI = urinary tract infection; rUTI = recurrent urinary tract infection; XGHP = xyloglucan–gelose–hibiscus–propolis; AEs = adverse effects; EC = Escherichia coli; XHP = xyloglucan–hibiscus–propolis; XG = xyloglucan–gelose; UT = urinary tract; MPO = myeloperoxidase assay; HSP = H. sabdariffa and propolis.
| Variable | De Servi et al., (2016) | Esposito et al., (2020) | Fraile et al., (2020) | Olier et al., (2017) | Cai et al., (2019) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study design | Evaluation of EC adherence/intracellular invasion in intestinal epithelial cells in vitro | Efficacy of xyloglucan and XG in an in vivo rat model on extraintestinal UTIs | To assess the properties of a medical device containing xyloglucan, propolis and hibiscus to create a bioprotective barrier to avoid the contact of uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains on cell walls in models of intestinal (CacoGoblet) and uroepithelial (RWPE1) cells (derived from normal human prostate epithelium) | Efficacy of RGHP, RG and vehicle on intestinal commensals commonly involved in UTIs in pretreatment animal model (streptomycin) | Single-center, observational, prospective study |
| Study endpoints | Cytotoxicity, preservation of tight junctions, preservation of paracellular flux, cell invasion, anti-adherence effects | Bacterial growth, intestinal damage and neutrophil infiltration, tight junction permeability, urine volume and pH, effect on bacterial infection of the UT, effect on bladder | Assays of bacterial adhesion, bacterial quantification and antibacterial activity | Bacterial analysis performed in samples recovered from feces | Capability to reduce the number of symptomatic recurrences, |
| Study duration | 21 days | 7 days | - | 7–11 days | 6 months |
| Agent | Utipro® | Xyloglucan and xyloglucan plus gelose (oral) | Xyloglucan (Tamarindus indica) and extracts of HSP | RGHP or RG adult human posology adapted to rat metabolism | Monurelle Plus® |
| Inclusion criteria | Caco-2 cells as intestinal mucosa model | Rats randomly divided into 6 groups Group 1: control group (vehicle), no EC Group 2: vehicle + xyloglucan (10 mg/kg daily) Group 3: vehicle + XG (10 mg/kg daily + 5 mg/kg daily) Group 4: EC group (109 CFUs/mL) Group 5: EC + xyloglucan (10 mg/kg daily) Group 6: EC + XG (10 mg/kg daily + 5 mg/ kg daily) |
Caco-2 cells as intestinal mucosa model UPEC strains from the Culture Collection (EC expressing type 1 and P. fimbriae (no. 41 from CCUG)). EC (CCUG), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (CECT111), Staphylococcus aureus (CECT240), Enterococcus faecalis (CECT481) |
Control group: female rats with intestinal microbiota not altered by streptomycin (n = 6) Treatment group with RGHP or RG twice daily, highly colonized with EC (n = 6) Study group (n = 30): rats supplemented with streptomycin plus two oral administrations of EC for transient colonization (disrupting colonization cesistance) | Adult women with rUTIs, defined as ≥2 infections in 6 months or ≥3 infections in 1 year |
| Study protocol/Endpoint |
MTT assay (cytotoxicity) TEER (tight junctions preservation) E. coli invasion (inoculation) Biofilm evaluation |
Infection induced by oral inoculation of 100 μL of E. coli (109 CFUs/mL) administered on days 0, 3 and 6 Xyloglucan and XG oral treatments administered by oral gavage 2 days before EC oral administration and every day until day 7 Xyloglucan and XG were at 1, 3 and 10 mg/mL Feces and urine samples collected from bladder, urethra and intestine, along with urine pH and chemical analysis. Feces, bladder and urethra were evaluated for bacterial counts f on agar plates. Intestine and bladder—histological evaluation, myeloperoxidase (MPO) assay and immunostaining of tight junctions |
Adherence assays Scanning electronic microscopy Bacterial quantification Antibacterial activity assay | Fecal samples (days 7–11). EC and other bacteria monitored by selective chromogenic agar plates. | After antibiotic treatment: one capsule a day for 15 days (one cycle every month for 6 months). Clinical and microbiological analyses at baseline (T0) and 1, 3 and 6 months after enrollment. |
| Assessment | Descriptive analysis of quantitative data | Descriptive analysis of quantitative data | Descriptive analysis of quantitative data | Comparison | Descriptive analysis; AEs |
| Results |
No cytotoxic effect (cell viabilities ≥88%) Monolayers treated showed higher TEER values Maintenance of paracellular flux independent of the concentration Decreased intracellular invasion of EC compared with untreated cells Decrease in the number of EC cells adhered | -Presence of xyloglucan at all tested concentrations did not |
Maximum concentrations (10 mg/mL for xyloglucan and propolis, 1 mg/mL for hibiscus), did not alter EC integrity Absence of antimicrobial activity of xyloglucan, propolis and hibiscus No bactericidal or bacteriostatic activity in any components Reduction in the number of cells adhered was observed for the three components in comparison with controls ( Highest reduction of adhesion observed with hibiscus at 10 mg/ml |
RGHP significantly reduced the initial median fecal count of EC EC was no longer detectable in the feces of two of six rats treated with RGHP. Administration of an equivalent dose of RG alone resulted in a similar decrease of the fecal EC count as compared with initial levels before treatment RGHP-treated animals showed reduced fecal median counts of Enterococci | Significant reduction in antibiotic use (31.2%) |
| Conclusions | Utipro® increases the resistance of cell tight junctions and protects cells against the adherence of EC | Barrier effect of xyloglucan on the epithelial intestine reduces the colonization of EC reservoirs, preventing |
Xyloglucan, propolis and hibiscus are devoid of antibiotic activity The three components are able to create a physical bioprotective film on intestinal cell mucosa | RGHP reduces fecal colonization by EC and Enterococci or by a dominant human EC strain; | XHP device improves quality of life in women with rUTIs, reduce recurrences and antibiotic use. |
The table shows all characteristics of all included RCTs in the systematic review and meta-analysis.
| Variable | Costache et al., (2019) | Garcia-Larrosa et al., (2016) | Salvatorelli et al., (2016) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study design | Multi-center, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel group, double blind, phase IV study | Double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group clinical trial |
| Study endpoints | Frequency of symptomatic rUTI recurrence, AEs | Safety, efficacy of reticulated RGHP in improving urinary symptoms and reducing the need of antibiotics for UTIs | % of symptomatic cystitis recurrences over 6 months, |
| Study duration | 40–90 days | 5–11 days | 6 months |
| Agent | XGHP (oral) | RG with hibiscus and propolis | RG Hibiscus sabdariffa calyx extract and propolis. |
| Inclusion criteria | Adult (men and women) ≥ 18 yrs with uncomplicated UTI |
Adult ≥ 18 years ≥1 symptoms of UTI < 72 h prior to study entry Positive dipstick urine test | Adult women ≥ 18 years with acute cystitis symptoms and a ciprofloxacin-susceptible isolate in urine culture |
| Study protocol/Endpoint | Antimicrobial + 2 daily capsules/ XGHP for 5 days, then 1 capsule of XGHP for 5 days. | 1:1 MD vs placebo for 5 days Need for antibiotic rescue treatment Change in symptoms of UTI from baseline to end treatment | Ciprofloxacin 500 mg/day and 2 MD capsules/day vs. ciprofloxacin 500 mg/day and matched placebo for 5 days + two additional cycles of MD for 2 weeks at months 1 and 2 after initial treatment. |
| Assessment | Physical examination, Likert scale, urine testing and culture (≥103 CFU/mL = positive) | Comparison | Descriptive analysis; AEs |
| Results | AEs: 5% unrelated to study products; |
Adverse effects not related to MD Reduced risk of antibiotic rescue treatment: 33.3% RGHP superior to placebo for controlling UTI | No recurrence after 1 month |
| Conclusions | XGHP as adjuvant therapy to first-line antimicrobials for treatment of uncomplicated UTIs in adults | RGHP reduced the risk of antibiotic treatment and improves UTI symptoms | New MDs prevent the recurrence of uncomplicated |
List of abbreviations used in table: MD = medical device; RGHP = reticulated-gelatin hibiscus and propolis; RG = reticulated gelatin; SRR = Symptomatic recurrence reduction ; UTI = Urinary Tract Infection; rUTI = recurrent urinary tract infection; XGHP = Xyloglucan-gelose-hibiscus-propolis; AEs = Adverse Effects; EC = Eschericia coli; XHP = Xyloglucan-Hibiscus-Propolis; XG = Xyloglucan-gelose; UT = Urinary Tract; MPO = Myeloperoxydase Assay; HSP = H. sabdariffa and propolis.
Figure 2The figure shows a forest plot of the effects of the medical device on women with cystitis in terms of clinical success (improvement/cure).
Figure 3The figure shows the funnel plot for publication bias analysis.
Figure 4The figure shows a forest plot of the effects of the medical device on women with cystitis in terms of adverse effects.