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Urinary Tract Infection Management Guide

The document provides guidelines for diagnosing and treating urinary tract infections (UTIs). Key points include: 1) A urine culture must be interpreted in the context of urinalysis and symptoms, as a positive culture alone does not necessarily indicate an infection. 2) Empiric antibiotic treatment is recommended for symptomatic UTIs based on factors like complicating factors and infection severity. Common antibiotics include TMP/SMX, cephalexin, and nitrofurantoin for uncomplicated cystitis, and ertapenem, ceftriaxone, or meropenem for more severe infections. 3) Diagnosis requires consideration of urinalysis results, urine culture colony count thresholds, and whether a

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views6 pages

Urinary Tract Infection Management Guide

The document provides guidelines for diagnosing and treating urinary tract infections (UTIs). Key points include: 1) A urine culture must be interpreted in the context of urinalysis and symptoms, as a positive culture alone does not necessarily indicate an infection. 2) Empiric antibiotic treatment is recommended for symptomatic UTIs based on factors like complicating factors and infection severity. Common antibiotics include TMP/SMX, cephalexin, and nitrofurantoin for uncomplicated cystitis, and ertapenem, ceftriaxone, or meropenem for more severe infections. 3) Diagnosis requires consideration of urinalysis results, urine culture colony count thresholds, and whether a

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Urinary Tract Infections

Overview
A urine culture must ALWAYS be interpreted in the context of the urinalysis and patient
symptoms. If a patient has no signs of infection on urinalysis, no symptoms of infection, but a
positive urine culture, the patient by definition has asymptomatic bacteriuria, or the specimen
was contaminated at the time of collection with organisms present on the skin/mucous
membranes. Typically, catheterized patients will become colonized within 48 hours of
catheterization. Patients with chronically indwelling catheters, urinary stoma, and neobladders
will almost universally have positive urine cultures. The only patient populations for which it is
recommended to screen for and treat asymptomatic bacteriuria are pregnant women and
patients scheduled for a genitourinary surgical procedure.
NOTES:
The diagnosis of a UTI in inpatients can be difficult.
Signs and symptoms, the presence of a urinary catheter, and the quality of specimen
collection must be considered before initiation of treatment.
Collection of cultures in the absence of signs and symptoms should be avoided.
All recommendations are for empiric treatment; narrow coverage based on
susceptibilities.

Management of patients without a urinary catheter


NOTE: Ciprofloxacin is not listed as an empiric treatment recommendation for inpatients with
non-catheter associated UTI at UCLA due to the low rate of E. coli susceptibility (58%). Use of
ciprofloxacin can be considered in patients with known-susceptible isolates or with non-lactose
fermenting organisms in the urine.
Category

Definition

Empiric Treatment

Asymptomatic bacteriuria

Positive urine culture with no


signs or symptoms

No treatment unless patient


is:
Pregnant
About to undergo a
urologic procedure
Post renal transplant
Neutropenic

Acute cystitis

Signs and symptoms (e.g.,


dysuria, urgency, frequency,
suprapubic pain) AND pyuria
(>5-10 WBC/hpf) AND
positive urine culture
100,000 colonies

Uncomplicated: female, no
urologic abnormalities, no
stones, no catheter.
TMP/SMX 1 DS PO
q12H x 3 days
OR
Cephalexin 500 mg
PO q6H x 7 days
OR

Nitrofurantoin 100 mg
PO q12H x 5 days (do
NOT use in patients
with CrCl < 40 ml/min)

Complicated: male, stones,


urologic abnormality,
pregnancy.
Same regimens as
above, except
duration is 7-14 days.
Acute pyelonephritis

Signs and symptoms (e.g.,


fever, flank pain) AND pyuria
AND positive urine culture
100,000 colonies.
Many patients will have other
evidence of upper tract
disease (i.e., leukocytosis,
WBC casts, or abnormalities
on imaging).

Urosepsis

Patient not severely ill


Ertapenem 1 g IV
q24H
OR
Ceftriaxone 1 g IV
q24H
Duration 7-14 days
Patient severely ill or
hospitalized >48 hours
Meropenem 1 g IV
q8H
OR
Cefepime 1 g IV q8H
OR
PCN allergy:
Aztreonam 1 g IV q8H
Duration 7-14 days

SIRS due to urinary tract


infection

Meropenem 1 g IV
q8H

Cefepime 1 g IV q8H

OR
OR

PCN allergy:
Aztreonam 1 g IV q8H
Duration 7-14 days
DIAGNOSIS
Specimen collection: The uretheral area should be cleaned with an antiseptic cloth and the urine
sample should be collected midstream or obtained by fresh catheterization. Specimens
collected using a drainage bag or taken from a collection hat are not reliable and should not be
sent.
Interpretation of the urinalysis (U/A) and urine culture
Urinalysis and urine cultures must be interpreted together in context of symptoms.
Urinalysis/microscopy:
Dipstick

Nitrites indicate bacteria in the urine indicates the presence of a nitratereducing microorganism, such as Escherichia coli or any other member of
the Enterobacteriaceae family.
Leukocyte esterase indicates white blood cells in the urine
Bacteria: presence of bacteria on urinalysis should be interpreted with caution
and is not generally useful
Pyuria (more sensitive than leukocyte esterase): >5-10 WBC/hpf or >27
WBC/microliter

Urine cultures:
If U/A is negative for pyuria, positive cultures are likely contamination.
Positive cultures with pyuria are defined as 100,000 (105) colonies. This cutoff
is the most sensitive for a true UTI. Situations in which lower colony counts <105
are significant include: patients who are already on antibiotics at the time of
culture, symptomatic young women, suprapubic aspiration, and men with pyuria.

TREATMENT NOTES
Sterile pyuria (positive U/A, but negative culture results) typically requires no treatment,
although if the patient has received antibiotics, the patient may still have a UTI. If sterile
pyuria persists consider other causes (e.g., interstitial nephritis or cystitis, fastidious
organisms such as TB).
Follow-up urine cultures or U/A are only warranted for ongoing symptoms. They should
NOT be acquired routinely to monitor response to therapy.
See below for discussion of treatment options for VRE and renal concentrations of
antibiotics.

Management of patients WITH a urinary catheter


Category

Definition

Empiric Treatment

Asymptomatic bacteriuria

Positive urine culture with no


signs or symptoms of
infection.

Remove the catheter

NOTE: obtaining routine


cultures in asymptomatic
patients is not recommended

No treatment unless the


patient is:
Pregnant
About to undergo a
urologic procedure
Post renal transplant
Neutropenic
Antibiotics do NOT decrease
asymptomatic bacteriuria or
prevent subsequent
development of UTI

Catheter-associated UTI
(CAUTI)

Signs and symptoms (fever


with no other source is the

Remove
(PREFERRED) or

most common; patients may


also have suprapubic or flank
pain) AND pyuria (>5-10
WBC/hpf) AND positive urine
culture 100,000 colonies
(see information below
regarding significant colony
counts)

replace catheter in all


patients
Patient stable with no
evidence of upper tract
disease:
If catheter removed,
consider observation
alone
OR
Ertapenem 1 g IV
q24H
OR
Ceftriaxone 1 g IV
q24H
OR
Ciprofloxacin 500 mg
PO BID or 400 mg IV
q12H (avoid in
pregnancy and in
patients with prior
exposure to
quinolones)
Duration: see treatment notes
Patient severely ill, with
evidence of upper tract
disease, or hospitalized >48
H:
Meropenem 1 g IV
q8H
OR
Cefepime 1 g IV q8H
OR
PCN allergy:
Aztreonam 1 g IV q8H
Duration: 7-14 days

DIAGNOSIS
Specimen collection: urine sample should be drawn in a sterile fashion from a fresh catheter
specimen. It should be drawn from either the catheter itself or through the port designed
specifically for this purpose, NOT from the urine collection bag. Specimen collection is critical
since colonization of the Foley bag or actual catheter is common.
Symptoms: Catheterized patients often lack typical symptoms of dysuria, although fever,
suprapubic pain, and flank pain may still be present.
Interpretation of the urinalysis and urine culture:

Pyuria: defined as >5-10 WBC/hpf or >27 WBC/microliter. In the presence of a catheter,


pyuria or positive cultures are not always a reliable indicator of infection. Lack of pyuria
suggests no active infection.
Positive urine culture: 100,000 colonies is the most specific for true CAUTI. Some
experts state that 1,000 colonies represents significant bacteriuria; however, if this
count is used, there should be a strong clinical suspicion of CAUTI based on symptoms
and absence of infection at another site.

TREATMENT NOTES
Remove catheter whenever possible.
The duration of treatment has not been well-studied for CAUTI.
Assess the degree of illness, comorbidities, and clinical response to determine duration
of therapy. As a general guide:
If the catheter is removed and the patient is not severely ill and has good
response to treatment: 5-7 days.
If the catheter remains present or the patient is severely ill (e.g. urosepsis) or has
pyelonephritis: 7-14 days.
Treament of UTI due to Enterococci
Almost all E. faecalis isolates are susceptible to Amoxicillin 500 mg PO TID OR
Ampicillin 1 g IV q6H and should be treated with these agents. For patients with PCN
allergy: Nitrofurantoin 100 mg PO BID (do NOT use in patients with CrCl < 40 mL/min).
E. faecium (commonly vancomycin resistant)
Nitrofurantoin 100 mg PO BID if susceptible (do NOT use in patients with CrCl <
40 mL/min)
Doxycycline 100 mg PO BID if susceptible
Fosfomycin 3 g PO once (if female without catheter or catheter is removed; ask
the micro lab for susceptibility)
Linezolid 600 mg PO BID OR fosfomycin 3 g PO every 2-3 days (max 21 days) if
complicated UTI or catheter cannot be removed
Treatment of UTI due to extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing organisms
ESBLs are enzymes that confer resistance to ALL penicillins, cephalosporins, and
aztreonam.
Risk factors for infection or colonization: recent hospitalization, residence in a long-term
care facility, prolonged use of broad spectrum antibiotics.
Meropenem 1 g IV q8H should be used for all severe urinary infections if the organism is
susceptible.
Ertapenem 1 g IV q24H can be used for uncomplicated UTI.
Ciprofloxacin or TMP/SMX can be used as alternatives to ertapenem for uncomplicated
UTI if the organism is susceptible. Nitrofurantoin or fosfomycin may also be used for
uncomplicated UTI if the organism is suceptible.
Renal excretion/concentration of selected antibiotics
Good (>60%): aminoglycosides, amoxicillin, amoxicillin/clavulanate, fosfomycin,
cefazolin, cefepime, cephalexin, ciprofloxacin, colistin, ertapenem, levofloxacin,
trimethroprim/sulfamethoxazole, vancomycin, amphotericin B, fluconazole, flucytosine
Variable (30-60%): cefpodoxime, linezolid (30%), doxycycline (29-55%), ceftriaxone,
tetracycline (~60%)
Poor (<30%): azithromycin, clindamycin, oxacillin, tigecycline, caspofungin,
posaconazole, voriconazole

References:
Pyuria and urinary catheters: Arch Int Med 2000;160(5):673-77.
IDSA Guidelines for treatment of uncomplicated acute bacterial cystitis and
pyelonephritis in women: Clin Infect Dis 1999;29:745.
European and Asian guidelines on management and prevention of CA-UTI: Int J Antimicrob
Agents 2008; 31S:S68.

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