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Treating Students with Urinary Tract Infections. Sara Mackenzie, MD, MPH Regional Health Specialist October 18, 2012. After this presentation, you will be able to:. Describe the prevalence of UTI in men and women Describe how to assess for uncomplicated UTI
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Treating Students with Urinary Tract Infections Sara Mackenzie, MD, MPH Regional Health Specialist October 18, 2012
After this presentation, you will be able to: • Describe the prevalence of UTI in men and women • Describe how to assess for uncomplicated UTI • List common antibiotics and indications for treatment of uncomplicated UTI • Identify red flags for complicated UTI or other infections (such as STI)
Can I get a sense of who is on call? • Center physician? • Center health and wellness manager? • Center nurse or LPN? • TEAP/CMHC? • Other?
Terminology: UTI = urinary tract infection Lower urinary tract: UTI=cystitis= bladder infection Upper urinary tract: pyelonephritis= kidney infection
Why discuss? • Global: > 250 million UTIs/yr > $7 billion direct costs • United States, annual figures: > 7 million uncomplicated UTIs > 250,000 acute pyelonephritis > 4 million UTIs in pregnancy > 1 million catheter-associated UTIs
In women: • Acute, uncomplicated UTI: • 3% of all women visit ≥ once a year • ≥ 50% report at least one per lifetime • Recurrent UTI: • 20-40% develop frequent (≥ 3/yr.)
In men: • Incidence significantly lower • 5 to 8 UTI per year per 10,000 men • Longer urethral length, drier periurethral environment, less frequent colonization with bacteria around urethra, and antibacterial substances in prostatic fluid
Complicated • A UTI is said to be “complicated” UTI if: • Diabetes • Pregnancy • History of pyelo in last year • Antibiotic resistance • Symptoms more than 7 days before seeking care • Hospital acquired infection • Functional or structural abnormality (such as stones, anatomical) • Immunosuppression • Male • Important to identify as higher risk of failing therapy
Uncomplicated • To say another way—a UTI is said to be “uncomplicated” if: • Female • Non-pregnant • Otherwise healthy • Normal urinary tract
Case 1: 22-year-old female who is otherwise healthy comes in to Health and Wellness complaining that “it hurts when I pee, I feel like I have to go right away, and I have to pee all the time”. • Uncomplicated UTI • Complicated UTI • Need more information
Presentation lower UTI • Dysuria, urgency and frequency [Suprapubic pain +/- hematuria (blood in urine)] • The probability of cystitis in a woman with one of the first three symptoms is 50% • The probability of cystitis in a woman with dysuria, frequency and NO vaginal discharge or irritation is 90%
Evaluation: • Review clinical history – up to date problem list • Review recent antibiotic use • Ask about recent new sexual partners (STI risk) and pregnancy risk • Physical exam: assess for fever, costovetebral angle tenderness and abdominal exam • Pelvic not usually indicated
Evaluation (continued): • Do you need to do urinalysis: • Leukocyte esterase detects white blood cells • Nitrite detects enterobacteriaceae • Hematuria common in UTI • Dipstick most accurate for predicting UTI if positive for either leukocyte esterase or nitrite ***Results of dipstick provide little additional useful information if history strongly suggestive of UTI!
Back to the Case • 22 Y/O with dysuria, frequency, urgency, • No prior medical history, antibiotic use, previous UTI or risk for STI or pregnancy • No fever, no CVA tenderness • Do you need to do a urine culture? • Yes • No • Need more information
Urine Culture • Empiric treatment usually indicated as pathogens are predictable
Microbiology *Uncomplicated UTI and pyelo 75-95% e.coli
Urine culture Culture indicated if: • Symptoms not characteristic • Persist or recur within 3 months of prior infection or antibiotic use • If not responding to empiric treatment within 24 to 48 hours • If suspect complicated infection • In all women with suspected pyelonephritis • All men suspected to have UTI
What antibiotic for uncomplicated cystitis? • Target for e. coli • Weigh cost, availability, allergy profile • Nitrofurantoin 100mg twice daily for 7 days OR • Trimethaprimsulfamethoxazole (Bactrim DS) 1 pill twice daily for 3 days
What antibiotic should be used? • Consider local resistance patterns • Local public health department or hospital should have information on resistance patterns in community
E. coli resistance (UW Hall Health N=1,284) Empiric bactrim treatment should be avoided if local resistance patterns exceed 20%
Fluoroquinolones: • Not recommended as first line by IDSA 2011 guidelines • Selection of more drug resistant organisms • Colonization with multidrug resistant organisms • Reserve for more serious infections
UTI Prevention • 20 to 40% of women will develop recurrent (>3/year) • Frequency of sexual intercourse strong risk factor • Review contraceptive options – avoid spermicides • Discuss urination after sex and increase fluids • Cranberry juice ??
UTI Prevention • Consider antibiotic prophylaxis • Prophylaxis advocated if 2 or more in 6 months or 3 or more over 12 months • After sex – single post coital dose • Daily – proven reduction in recurrence; take for 6 to 12 months; • Nitrofurantoin or bactrim or cipro can be used