Preventing Recurrent UTI With Vaginal Estrogen

Last updated: October 27, 2025
Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University
Overall Status: Completed

Phase

4

Condition

Gynecological Infections

Urinary Incontinence

Urinary Tract Infections

Treatment

Vaginal estradiol tablets

Clinical Study ID

NCT05551949
IRB00314740
R01DK130856
  • Ages 55-100
  • Female

Study Summary

Among postmenopausal women who suffer from recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI), vaginal estrogen therapy prevents UTI recurrences for 50% of sufferers. This research will investigate why some women benefit but others do not, focusing on (a) the effects of vaginal estrogen therapy on the bacteria that inhabit the vagina and bladder, (b) its influence on immune responses in both compartments, and (c) the extent to which those changes are critical to successful UTI prevention. The findings will be a first step in the development of more effective strategies to prevent UTI, one of the most common and costly benign urologic conditions.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

Participants in this study will be

  • Postmenopausal women (menopausal for at least 1 year)

  • Minimum age of 55 years

  • Participants will have documentation of recurrent UTI, defined as follows:

  • History of treatment for at least 3 UTIs in the past year or 2 episodes within 6 months AND

  • At least one positive urine culture during an acute symptomatic episode.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Women receiving antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent UTI recurrence;

  • Women with contraindications to vaginal estrogen (as indicated on the FDA-mandatedpackage insert) and those who have used vaginal or systemic estrogen within the past 6 months;

  • Women with an active UTI and those who have received antibiotics within the prior 2weeks;

  • Women with complicated rUTI, defined by immune compromise, anatomic or functionalabnormalities of the urinary tract, indwelling catheterization, those performingself-catheterization, and those with neurological disease or illness relevant to thelower urinary tract;

  • Women with only asymptomatic bacteriuria (rather than recurrent symptomatic UTI)

Study Design

Total Participants: 27
Treatment Group(s): 1
Primary Treatment: Vaginal estradiol tablets
Phase: 4
Study Start date:
January 01, 2022
Estimated Completion Date:
August 31, 2025

Study Description

Recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTI) are a significant problem among older women: 13% of female Medicare beneficiaries experience at least one UTI annually and >40% of these develop chronic recurrent UTI. Although UTIs are significantly reduced by vaginal estrogen therapy (VET), 50% of those using VET continue to experience UTI recurrences. It is unknown why some women benefit from VET while others do not. This application focuses on interrogating two mechanisms likely to be central to the effectiveness of VET. The first is the urogenital microbiota: an increase in vaginal lactobacilli is the purported mechanism by which VET reduces rUTI. Important and unanswered questions include how VET influences specific Lactobacillus spp., whether changes to specific Lactobacillus spp are the key to successful prophylaxis, and how VET affects the urinary microbiota. A second mechanism addressed by this application is the host vaginal and urinary immune response. Estrogen appears to influence localized urogenital immune responses, including Th17 and Th1 versus Th2 pathway signaling. Animal studies suggest that these compartmentalized immune responses play a critical role in UTI susceptibility, but human data are lacking. This application will address these unanswered questions. Postmenopausal women with rUTI will be treated with VET. Samples collected before and after VET will characterize vaginal and urinary microbiota, soluble mediators of inflammation in both compartments, and vaginal D-lactic acid. Aims 1 and 2 of this proposal will investigate the impact of VET on the urogenital microbiota and urogenital immune responses, respectively. Aim 3 will characterize the urogenital environments of participants who continue to experience rUTI during VET versus those who remain UTI-free. The accomplishment of these aims will provide pilot data for a larger and more definitive clinical trial. These proposed studies are a key step toward the investigators' goals of identifying biomarkers that reliably predict a successful response to rUTI prophylaxis and ascertaining the biological conditions required for successful UTI prevention. Ultimately, an understanding of the mechanisms of rUTI prevention will allow the development of novel and effective prevention strategies for postmenopausal women suffering from rUTI.

Connect with a study center

  • Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center

    Baltimore, Maryland 21224
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center

    Baltimore 4347778, Maryland 4361885 21224
    United States

    Site Not Available

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