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22.6.2000. 2. Prevalence of UTIs 2. UTI is rare in young and middle-aged menUTI in men is often associated with catheterisation or urological procedures.bacteriuria in elderly men occurs inabout 10% of those living at home,about 20% of those living in nursing homes and30% of those who are in
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1. 22.6.2000 1 Prevalence of urinary tract infections (UTI) almost half of all women will have at least one UTI in their lives.
the risk of UTI in women increases after menopause
after a UTI 20 - 40 % will have a recurrence
the recurring infections are usually reinfections.
asymptomatic bacteriuria in women occurs in
2.7% of 15 - 24 year olds
9.3% of over 65 year olds and
20 - 50% of over 80 year olds
2. 22.6.2000 2 Prevalence of UTIs 2 UTI is rare in young and middle-aged men
UTI in men is often associated with catheterisation or urological procedures.
bacteriuria in elderly men occurs in
about 10% of those living at home,
about 20% of those living in nursing homes and
30% of those who are in-patients in hospitals
urinary catheter increases the risk almost ten-fold in hospitalised patients and those in other care homes.
pyelonephritis is common in patients who have been catheterised for over a month.
3. 22.6.2000 3 Urinary tract infection occurs when bacteria which colonise the anal area ascend through urethra to the bladder
Risk factors include
reduced resistance offered by the mucous membranes (e.g. after menopause)
sexual intercourse
disturbances in ureteral functioning
in children the re-entering of urine back into the ureters (vesicoureteral reflux), which predisposes them particularly to upper UTI’s
4. 22.6.2000 4 Other risk factors:
benign prostatic hypertrophy
any illness, such as diabetes, which affects the emptying of the bladder
spinal injury (associated with disturbances in bladder emptying or urinary catheter)
catheterisation in hospital or residential care
other urological procedures
5. 22.6.2000 5 Escherichia coli
most common
about 80% of primary care infections
about 50% of hospital-acquired infections
Others:
enterococci
Staphylococcus saprophyticus and
klebsiellas
various types of pseudomonas and proteus are more rare
6. 22.6.2000 6 ‘Uncomplicated’ urinary tract infections are
occasional lower urinary tract infections in women with no predisposing factors to infections
‘Complicated’ infections are all other UTIs including lower UTIs in
pregnant women
men
children
and catheter-induced infections
The investigations and treatment of these entail special features
7. 22.6.2000 7 Cystitis:
typical symptoms include frequency and burning sensation when passing urine.
Pyelonephritis:
only some patients have difficulties in micturition
temperature (> 38oC) and flank or back pain
nausea in the elderly or sudden collapse in health status (”off-legs”)
8. 22.6.2000 8 Symptoms of UTIs 2 incontinence or offensive urine in the elderly should not be considered as UTI as such; even though they may be indicative signs of an infection
almost any signs of infection in infants may be indicative of a UTI (C)
in a small child a temperature alone, without any other signs of an infection, should raise a suspicion of a UTI
UTI in children and the elderly may manifest itself as incontinence or retention.
9. 22.6.2000 9 Based on the symptoms both
a clinical diagnosis of a UTI and
a differentiation between lower (cystitis) or upper (pyelonephritis) UTI should be made
10. 22.6.2000 10 in adults and older children a mid stream urine (MSU) sample usually reliably represents the urine in the bladder.
samples collected from urinary bags or bedpans should not be used to diagnose UTI as they invariably will be contaminated
the most reliable sample is obtained via a suprapubic puncture
urine in bladder >4 hours (any shorter time will increase the risk of false negative findings)
11. 22.6.2000 11 Clinically significant pathogen concentrations
12. 22.6.2000 12 No need to do any urinalysis, if a female patient, who does not belong to any of the risk groups, clearly has occasional cystitis based on her symptoms
Urine microscopy is not usually necessary to diagnose cystitis
13. 22.6.2000 13 Diagnosis algorithm
14. 22.6.2000 14 Bacterial culture of urine should be carried out in all cases, except in uncomplicated cystitis, even though the results will not be available when medication is commenced (B)
In early pregnancy bacterial culture should be carried out in all pregnant women if only to diagnose asymptomatic bacteriuria (A)
In adult febrile infections with generalised symptoms, and in children’s infections, C-reactive protein (CRP) concentration above 40 mg/l is suggestive of a kidney infection (C)
15. 22.6.2000 15 Results of urine culture have repeatedly shown bacterial growth above 105 bacteria/ml
possible pyuria does not affect interpretation
if several bacterial strains are grown on culture; contamination of the sample is the likely cause
investigations and treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria should be instigated only in pregnant women
16. 22.6.2000 16 Acute uncomplicated cystitis:
patient with typical symptoms, not belonging to any of the risk groups, is treated without laboratory investigations
if the symptoms are atypical, a strip test urinalysis may be carried out to support diagnosis
if the strip test is negative, the urine should be cultured and other reasons for the symptoms should be considered
First choices:
trimethoprim for 3-5 days
nitrofurantoin for 5-7 days or
pivmecillinam for 5-7 or 3 days Antimicrobial therapy in UTIs 1
17. 22.6.2000 17 Reserve drugs:
Quinolones (norfloxacin, ofloxacin or ciprofloxacin) for 3 days
if first choice drugs are not suitable or
if the infection has not responded to first choice drugs or
recurrent infection within 4 weeks
if there is a relapse, urine must be cultured and the treatment should be continued for 7 days
In special cases:
cefalexin or cefadroxil for 5 days (if the above are contraindicated)
sulphatrimethoprim for 3 days (particularly if the level of infection is unclear)
amoxicillin for 5 days (particularly in enterococcal infections)
18. 22.6.2000 18
single-dose therapy is slightly less effective than conventional therapy
effective in infections caused by E. coli, but less so in S. saprophyticus infections
recommended particularly when practical reasons warrant its use (e.g. self-care)
Preparations:
phosphomycin 3 g
norfloxacin 800 mg
ciprofloxacin 500 - 750 mg
ofloxacin 200 mg as a single dose
19. 22.6.2000 19 Uncomplicated pyelonephritis:
A pyelonephritis patient who is not unduly ill can be looked after at home (C)
Treatment with either a fluoroquinolone or sulphatrimethoprim orally for 10-14 days
20. 22.6.2000 20 Treatment of pyelonephritis 2 An unwell pyelonephritis patient with or without high temperature should be admitted to hospital
in hospital the treatment is commenced with cefuroxime i.v. 0.75-1.5g every 8 hours or with an fluoroquinolone orally
it is usually possible to change over to oral medication with first-generation cephalosporins in 2-3 days, when response to treatment is obvious
third-generation cephalosporins are usually not recommended for the treatment of uncomplicated pyelonephritis, but ceftriaxone may be chosen as the initial therapy, if either once a day or intramuscular administration are considered beneficial
aminoglycosides have shown no additional benefits over other forms of treatment
21. 22.6.2000 21 Bacteriuria during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of premature labour and pyelonephritis
asymptomatic bacteriuria and cystitis are treated in the same way
single-dose treatment is not recommended
drugs of choice
nitrofurantoin 75 mg twice daily for 5 - 7 days or
beta-lactamase (mecillinam, amoxicillin or first-generation cephalosporins) for 5 – 7 days.
due to foetal risk fluoroquinolones should be avoided during the whole of pregnancy, and sulphatrimethoprim during the latter part of pregnancy
22. 22.6.2000 22
treatment principles are the same as for adults
little evidence to support short term treatment in children (C)
drugs of choice
nitrofurantoin 5 mg/kg/day or
trimethoprim 8 mg/kg/day
treatment to continue for 5 days (C)
23. 22.6.2000 23 treated so that any possible infection of the kidney is also covered, i.e. with antibiotics with high tissue penetrability
oral medication acceptable
drugs of choice
sulphatrimethoprim (trimethoprim 8 mg/kg/day)
cefalexin 30 - 50 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses
cefuroxime axetil 20 mg/kg/day in 2 divided doses or
mecillinam 20 - 40 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses
treatment to continue for 7 days (C)
24. 22.6.2000 24 all infants with febrile UTI should be admitted to hospital
drugs of choice
cefuroxime (100 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses) or
ceftriaxone (80 mg/kg/day daily)
intravenous therapy until obvious response
when obvious response to treatment is observed, medication is changed over to oral until the total course of treatment, i.e. 10 days, is completed
follow-up treatment according to culture and sensitivity results, with an antibiotic with good tissue penetrability (e.g. sulphatrimethoprim or a cephalosporin)
25. 22.6.2000 25 a UTI in men can be associated with either acute or chronic bacterial prostatitis
prostatitis or epididymitis may play a part particularly in febrile UTI
it is advisable to palpate both the prostate and scrotum
chronic bacterial prostatitis, or at least the retention of bacteria in the prostatic ducts, should be suspected in relapses with the same causative bacteria
26. 22.6.2000 26 Afebrile lower urinary tract infection in men:
if the infection is not associated with urinary stricture or prostatitis,it is treated with the same drugs as cystitis in women, but the treatment should continue for 7 - 10 days
nitrofurantoin should not be used in men as adequate prostatic concentrations are not achieved (D)
Febrile urinary tract infection in men is treated with
a long course of antibiotics with good prostatic and epididymal penetration
first choice: a fluoroquinolone for 2 weeks
27. 22.6.2000 27 UTIs in men 3 UTI in men associated with acute bacterial prostatitis
treatment for 4 - 6 weeks (depending how quickly patient responds to treatment)
to be followed up with low dose prophylaxis with e.g. trimethoprim or nitrofurantoin
Chronic bacterial prostatitis
recurrent UTI’s and calcifications in prostate
oral quinolones for 2 – 3 months (D)
to be followed up with prophylactic medication
28. 22.6.2000 28 Cystitis in diabetics
drugs of choice for initial treatment are same as for uncomplicated UTI
antibiotic treatment must always be based on the results of urine culture
treatment to continue for 7 days
Acute pyelonephritis in diabetics
treatment is the same as for uncomplicated pyelonephritis
consider urological imaging earlier than normal, if there is no response to appropriately chosen medication
the causative agents of recurrent UTI’s in diabetics are often unusual, resistant microbes (species of pseudomonas, enterococci and enterobacter) and various candida species.
29. 22.6.2000 29 prophylaxis should be considered when more than 3 infections per year
prophylaxis to continue for 6 months
if infections recur after prophylactic treatment, the prophylaxis is re-commenced for 6 – 12 months (D)
30. 22.6.2000 30 First choice:
trimethoprim 100 mg in the evenings
nitrofurantoin 50 - 75 mg in the evenings
Second choice:
methenamine hippurate 1 g twice daily
norfloxacin 200 mg daily or on 3 evenings per week
nitrofurantoin (not if serum creatinine is above 150 µmol/l)
quinolones (in cases where there is no response with other prophylactic medication or tolerance to other medications is poor)
During pregnancy:
nitrofurantoin 50 mg daily or
methenamine hippurate 1 g daily for the rest of the pregnancy
particularly if recurrent bacteriuria is diagnosed in early pregnancy
31. 22.6.2000 31 A single-dose prophylaxis taken after intercourse is effective in women whose UTI’s are clearly associated with sexual intercourse (A)
First choice:
trimethoprim 100-300 mg as a single dose
nitrofurantoin 50-75 mg as a single dose
Second choice:
norfloxacin 200 mg, ofloxacin 100 mg or ciprofloxacin 100-250 mg
sulphatrimethoprim (1 single-strength tablet)
32. 22.6.2000 32 The main quality criteria for the treatment of UTI’s urine sample to be collected appropriately when infection is suspected
unnecessary culturing of urine samples to be avoided
the investigation and treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria to be reserved for risk groups
diagnosing structural anomalies of the urinary tract in children
rational use of antibiotics
33. 22.6.2000 33 the treatment of UTI in a catheterised patient should always be based on the identity and sensitivity of the causative microbe
the catheter should always be removed, at least for the duration of treatment, as otherwise the bacteria will not be eradicated
if this is not feasible, the recommendation is to continue treatment for 7 - 10 days even in lower UTI’s
34. 22.6.2000 34 In the following patient groups antibiotics can prevent serious infective complications caused by long-term catheterisation :
after renal transplant (for 3 months)
granulocytopenic patients and
possibly in diabetics
it is recommended that drugs which could be of benefit in serious infections (beta-lactamases and fluoroquinolones) are not used for prophylaxis
Antibiotic prophylaxis is not recommended:
for repeat catheterisations
for the insertion of long-term catheter
for pyuria and bacteriuria in a patient with a long-term catheter but no obvious infection
35. 22.6.2000 35 Antimicrobial therapy in association with a urinary catheter 3 Fungal bladder infection in a catheterised patient:
systemic fluconazole is slightly more effective than topical amphotericin B
removal of the catheter will improve the eradication of the microbe during therapy
Suprapubic catheter:
its use is associated with a lower incidence of bacteriuria in postoperative care
any infections are treated as any other infections associated with urinary catheters
36. 22.6.2000 36 Infections associated with impaired urine outflow and neurological illnesses
it is recommended not to treat asymptomatic bacteriuria
acute episodes of infections are treated according to urine microbiology
depending on response, treatment is to continue 7 - 14 days
if the underlying condition is treatable prophylaxis should be provided, after the infection has been cleared, until the urological condition has been treated
if the risk factor is permanent no prophylaxis should be provided, after the infection has been cleared, whether bacteriuria is present or not
6 months’ prophylaxis may be considered if infections are frequent
no prophylaxis is recommended for the elderly in care who are either incontinent or regularly use incontinence pads
37. 22.6.2000 37 UTI in dialysis patients:
UTI often has few symptoms or is totally asymptomatic and often remains undiagnosed
the significance of pyuria in a dialysis patient is unclear
if UTI is diagnosed, it should be treated according to culture results
38. 22.6.2000 38 UTI in polycystic kidney disease
UTI with the symptoms of cystitis can be treated with oral medication chosen according to culture results
in febrile UTI a cyst infection is common, but difficult to diagnose
antibiotics with best possible penetrability into renal tissue and cyst fluid, such as fluoroquinolones, are recommended
39. 22.6.2000 39 Post renal transplant 1
febrile UTI’s are common during the first few months (35 - 79% will get an infection during the first 3 - 4 months)
UTI’s after this stage are less serious and easier to treat
treatment according to culture results with usual drugs is adequate
the treatment of symptomatic infection in women is to continue for 1-2 weeks and in men for 4 weeks
urological investigations should be carried out to rule out any predisposing anomalies
there is neither study data nor consensus about the benefits of treating bacteriuria post transplant. If the decision favours treatment, at least a week’s treatment is recommended
40. 22.6.2000 40 UTI’s in special situations 5 Post renal transplant 2
fluoroquinolones or sulphatrimethoprim are both suitable
follow-up treatment consists of prophylaxis with either trimethoprim or nitrofurantoin for 3 - 6 months
Restrictions in antibiotic therapy:
nitrofurantoin should be avoided if serum creatinine is above 150 µmol/l
the use of trimethoprim and sulpha should also be avoided in severe renal impairment (creatinine > 350 µmol/l) or their concentration should at least be monitored during prolonged use
if fluoroquinolones are used, their dose should be reduced
aminoglycosides should be avoided in those using cyclosporin due to the risk of renal damage