DIagnoSing Care hOme UTI Study (DISCO UTI)

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    Feasibility cohort study on predictors of diagnosis and prognosis of urine infection in care home residents: DIagnoSing Care hOme UTI Study

  • IRAS ID

    323902

  • Contact name

    Nick Francis

  • Contact email

    nick.francis@soton.ac.uk

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    1 years, 5 months, 31 days

  • Research summary

    The number of care home residents is increasing and urinary tract infections (UTIs) are common amongst this group. Accurate diagnosis of UTI is important because not treating an infection may lead to serious consequences including death. However, giving antibiotic treatment when there isn’t an infection causes side effects and antibiotic resistance, making future infections harder to treat.

    Unfortunately, there are several challenges that mean that it is difficult to diagnose UTI accurately in care home residents. Firstly, UTIs don’t always cause clear symptoms for people who live in care homes. They sometimes just cause symptoms like confusion which can have lots of different possible causes. Secondly, it may be hard for people living with dementia to say how they are feeling or to easily provide a urine sample. Thirdly, many people who live in care homes have bacteria present in their urine even when they are well, but this not harmful and does not need treatment. Finally, urine tests that are currently available do not give accurate or quick results.

    We have thought about some new ways that might help show us if someone in a care home really has a UTI but we don’t know yet whether these will work. Our ideas include 1) Working out which symptoms or signs mean a UTI is more likely 2) Detecting new markers of infection in urine samples and 3) Trying out new bedside tests that give rapid results.

    For this study we plan to recruit 100 care home residents who will be followed up over 6 months. All 100 participants will provide information and a urine sample at the beginning of the study. 25 of these participants will also provide repeated weekly samples for 4 weeks to look at any changes in the urine over time. Additional information and urine samples will be collected if a participant develops a possible UTI during the study and any treatments will be recorded.

    Our findings will be used to develop a funding application for a larger study aiming to improve the diagnosis of UTI in care home residents.

  • REC name

    North East - Newcastle & North Tyneside 2 Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    23/NE/0046

  • Date of REC Opinion

    23 Mar 2023

  • REC opinion

    Favourable Opinion