Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
1. Rationale Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is caused by an overgrowth of bacteria and affects most women at some point. The infections can cause foul-smelling discharge and sometimes itching and burning. There are already some approved medications for the treatment of BV. They are not always effective, which means that the infection often returns. Many of these treatments contain antibiotics. In this study, a medical device will be evaluated, a vaginal tablet called pHyph. pHyph contains a substance that occurs naturally in the body, Glucono-delta-lactone, which is part of the process when the body handles sugar. It is also an approved food additive. In pHyph, Glucono-delta-lactone restores the acidity of the vagina to normal. In a slightly acidic environment, the bacteria that cause bacterial vaginosis do not thrive, but instead the lactobacilli that are found in a normal vaginal bacterial flora are favored. 2. Aim Primary aim: To evaluate the safety after 12 days of treatment with pHyph in patients with BV Secondary aims: 1. To investigate the difference in the frequency of vaginal dysbiosis after daily treatment for 6 days with pHyph compared to longer daily treatment. 2. To investigate changes in different Lactobacillus species after daily treatment for 6 days with pHyph compared to longer daily treatment. 3. To investigate the difference in clinical efficacy after daily treatment for 6 days with pHyph compared to longer daily treatment. 4. To investigate the relief of the symptom of "fishy odor" after daily treatment for 6 days with pHyph compared to longer daily treatment Exploratory aims: To evaluate vaginal microbiome data after different treatment durations in patients with BV 4. Primary outcome measure To assess the safety and well-tolerated nature of the treatment for patients receiving treatment for a total of 12 days: 1. By monitoring and recording any adverse events that occur during the treatment period, from the first visit to the fourth visit. 2. By assessing for signs of redness, swelling or irritation of the vaginal mucosa using a rating scale from 0 to 3, at days 0, 7, 14 and 25. 5\. Secondary outcome measure The study will compare changes during and after treatment at different time points (days 0, 7, 10, 14 and 25). Among other things, the following are being looked at: * Presence of bacterial imbalance in the vagina * Amount of different beneficial Lactobacillus bacteria * Proportion of patients who recover from symptoms such as foul-smelling or abnormal discharge * Change in vaginal pH and possible presence of vaginal yeast * How easy and user-friendly the treatment is perceived according to patients' responses in an app Exploratory outcome measure To further evaluate vaginal microbiome data after different treatment lengths in patients with bacterial vaginosis (BV). 6\. Study design 32 women with BV are planning to be included in the study. The aim is to evaluate the safety after 12 days of treatment (days 0-5 and days 7-12) with pHyph in patients with BV. 7\. Study population The study will include women who have had their period but have not yet reached menopause, are 18 years of age or older and are seeking treatment, directly at a clinic or via advertising, for symptoms of BV, such as foul-smelling or abnormal discharge. The diagnosis of BV is made according to the Amsel criteria, defined as having at least three of the following criteria: thin whitish-yellow discharge, special cells visible under a microscope, a vaginal pH value higher than 4.5, and a distinct fishy odor when a basic substance is added (this symptom must be present). Women with signs of other vaginal infections will not be able to participate in the study. 8\. Interventions The study includes four clinic visits over a period of approximately 25 days. All participants receive active treatment with pHyph vaginal tablets, which are inserted vaginally at home in the evening with a CE marked applicator. Exact instructions are given at the first visit. At the four clinic visits, which are made on days 0, 7, 14 and 25, a gynecological examination is performed and samples are taken. Between visits, participants answer questions about BV symptoms and treatment via a mobile app. * Visit 1 (Inclusion visit): with information, consent and pregnancy test. A gynecological examination and a sample for BV control are performed. The participant is given an applicator and tablets for 6 days of treatment to use at home every evening. * Visit 2 (Day 7): A new gynecological examination and a sample for BV control. The participant is given an additional 6 days of tablets. A sample for BV control is taken at home on Day 10. * Visit 3 (Day 14): A new gynecological examination and a sample for BV control and questions about the ease of use of the product. * Visit 4 (Day 25): Follow-up visit with a new gynecological examination, sample for BV control, pregnancy test and questions about health and menstruation.
Methodology: Patients seeking treatment for BV symptoms will be recruited from strategic marketing campaigns, and among possible BV patients managed by clinical sites participating in the investigation. All patients will receive pHyph treatment for 12 days in total (Day 0-5 + Day 7-12). There will be 4 visits: Visit 1 (Day 0, screening and inclusion), Visit 2 (Day 7), Visit 3 (Day 14), and Visit 4 (Day 25, end-of-investigation). The outcome of the treatment will be compared for the different time points. Microbiome swab samples will be collected at all visits. At screening (Visit 1), the Investigator or delegated staff will ask patients about the onset and end of their last menstruation. Patients should not be included in the investigation, or inclusion should be postponed, if menstruation is foreseen to occur on Day 0-6 or at the time of Visit 2, scheduled for Day 7. If a patient is menstruating at the scheduled timepoint for Visit 3 or 4, the visit should be re scheduled until the menstrual bleeding is no longer heavy (light bleeding or brown discharge is acceptable), even if this leads to the visit taking place outside the allowed time window. Patients will self-apply pHyph at home, at night before going to bed, using a vaginal tablet applicator. pHyph and the applicators will be dispensed to the patients at Visit 1 (Day 0) and Visit 2 (Day 7) at the investigation site. To measure pHyph compliance, patients will be asked to return all used and unused pHyph packages, and the number of unused pHyph will be counted. Patients will continuously complete BV symptom scoring scale questionnaires via the ViedocMe™ mobile application. Safety assessments: Local tolerability assessment as well as AE and device deficiency (DD) reporting. Performance (efficacy) assessments: Gynaecological exam, including evaluation of Amsel's criteria; vaginal swab for Nugent scoring; vaginal pH assessment; patient questionnaire (BV scoring scale, BV recurrence, usability), vaginal swab for qPCR analysis of vaginal microbiome. Exploratory assessments: Additional evaluation of vaginal microbiome DNA data.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
No
CTC Stockholm
Solna, Sweden
CMedical
Uppsala, Sweden
Start Date
January 15, 2026
Primary Completion Date
June 5, 2026
Completion Date
June 30, 2026
Last Updated
February 6, 2026
32
ESTIMATED participants
pHyph
DEVICE
Lead Sponsor
Gedea Biotech AB
Collaborators
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
Neither the United States Government nor Clareo Health make any warranties regarding the data. Check ClinicalTrials.gov frequently for updates.
View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and Conditions