Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly Dr Grace Sluga Consultant Microbiologist.

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Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly Dr Grace Sluga Consultant Microbiologist

Transcript of Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly Dr Grace Sluga Consultant Microbiologist.

Page 1: Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly Dr Grace Sluga Consultant Microbiologist.

Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly

Dr Grace Sluga

Consultant Microbiologist

Page 2: Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly Dr Grace Sluga Consultant Microbiologist.

Urine dipstick

• Leucocyte esterease– Detects the presence of pyuria in the urine

• False positives with vaginal secretions, nephrolithiasis, bladder tumours, corticosteroids, etc…

• Nitrites– Detect the presence of bacteria (Enterobacteriaceae and

some gram positive organisms, which converts urinary nitrate in nitrite) – Does not distinguish asymptomatic bacteriuria from symptomatic UTI

• False positive with contamination, exposure to the air• false negatives with bacteria that dose not reduce nitrates

(Enterococcus spp and Streptococcus spp) and low dietary nitrates

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Value of urine dipstick analysis

• Abnormal leucocytes:– Sensitivity:48-86%– Specificity: 17-86%– PPV: 0.38– NPV: 0.93

• NPV and PPV value in the general population with pre-test probability of 0.15 (prevalence)

• Abnormal nitrates– Sensitivity: 45-60%– Specificity: 85-98%– PPV: 0.41– NPV: 0.92

The urine dipstick test useful to rule out infections. A meta-analysis of the accuracy BMC Urol 2004

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Value of urine dipstick analysis

• Do not do routine urine dipstick: lack specificity for UTI

• Use urine dipstick to rule out UTI in patient with unclear symptoms/signs: high negative predictive value

• However, a positive dipstick requires further evaluation and does not rule in UTI

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Asymptomatic bacteriuria

• Definitions:– Significant number of bacteria in a urine culture: >10^5

CFU with no symptoms of UTI– Regardless of the presence of WBCs in the urine

• Microbiology is similar to that of symptomatic UTI and pyelonephritis

• But subtle changes in the organism pathogenicity factors may predispose to asymptomatic bladder colonisation rather than infection (eg: lack of fimbria in E coli)

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Prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria in selected populations.

Nicolle L E et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2005;40:643-654

© 2005 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America

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Randomized clinical trials of treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria in elderly populations.

Nicolle L E et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2005;40:643-654

© 2005 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America

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Asymptomatic bacteriuria

• Very common – do not treat• Treatment:

– Does not significantly reduce the risk of symptomatic UTI

– Does not decrease mortality– Does not improve continence – Increase risk of drug adverse events and

antimicrobial resistance

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Asymptomatic bacteriuria

• Best prevention: do not send urine samples unless patient have symptoms of UTI (frequency, dysuria, suprapubic pain) or evidence of systemic infection

• Screening or treatment for asymptomatic bacteriuria is never indicated unless:– Patient is pregnant– Patient is undergoing a urological procedure

where mucosal bleeding is anticipated

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Catheter specimen urines: THE STATS

– Incidence of bacteriuria in CSU: 3-8% per day– By 1 month: nearly 100% with CSU will be

bacteriuric– Around 90% of patients with CA-bacteriuria are

asymptomatic and apyrexial– Bacteraemia complicates <1% of CA-bacteriura– Virtually all patients with long term catheter will

have positive urine dipstick

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CA-bacteriuria: when to treat

• Symptoms of UTI in catheterised patients:– New costovertebral angle tenderness or loin pain or pelvic

disconfort– Fever >38 or 1.5C above baseline on two occasions during

12 hours.– New onset delirium– Acute, unexplained haematuria

» IDSA/NICE/SIGN guidelines

• Peripheral high WBC: low predictive value for diagnosing CA-UTI

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Antimicrobial resistance data

• All urine samples sent from 1 January 2013 to 31 March 2013

• Source: GPs and MTW patients• 5319 positive urine samples

– E coli: 83%– Klebsiella spp: 7.8%– Proteus spp: 5.6%– Serratia/enterobacter/citrobacter group: 3%

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Antimicrobial resistance data

• 33% - Resistant to trimethoprim• 21% - Resistant to nitrofurantoin• 14% - Resistant to co-amoxiclav• 5.5% - Resistant to gentamicin• Limitations of the data:

– Data from last year – new data being collected– Data may be skewed as urine from straighforward,

unclomplicated cases may not be sent and samples include hospitalised patients