INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Urosepsis/septic shock:
- Manage airway and resuscitate as indicated
- IV crystalloid and vasopressors as needed
- Early goal-directed therapy
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
Stable Patients
- For uncomplicated UTIs in women for most antibiotics, 3 days of therapy:
- More effective than single dose
- Clinically as effective as 5–10-day course with fewer side effects
- Resistance varies by place and changes over time:
- In North America, 40–50% of
E. coli
are resistant to ampicillin; 3–17% to fluoroquinolones and is increasing.
- Resistance to trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) is increasing (up to 30%).
- Nitrofurantoin: In some studies, nitrofurantoin resistance is less than for other more widely used antibiotics.
- Culture resistance may not correlate with clinical effect because urine antibiotic concentrations are much higher than those used in laboratory testing. However, symptom resolution may be delayed a few days in patients with resistant bacteria.
- Antibiotics of choice:
- Nitrofurantoin
- TMP/SMX
- Fluoroquinolones 2nd-line treatment in women:
- Sulfonamide intolerance
- All quinolones equally effective (∼95% susceptibility rates) but side effects vary
- High frequency of antimicrobial resistance related to recent treatment
- Live in areas with unknown or >20% resistance to TMP/SMX
- Oral cephalosporins may be reasonable alternatives in specific circumstances:
- Require 7-day treatment regimens
- Amoxicillin–clavulanate not as effective as ciprofloxacin, probably due to failure to eradicate vaginal
E. coli
- Diabetic women have increased risk of bacteriuria with Klebsiella spp.
- Treat dysuria with phenazopyridine.
- Treat pain with appropriate analgesics.
- Cranberry juice or tablets/products:
- Prevents specific
E. coli
from adhering to uroepithelial cells but probably does not lower UTI recurrence rate in women with history of recurrent UTIs
- Evidence suggests ineffective for treatment
- Treatment of upper tract disease—
rule of 2s
:
- 2 L of IV crystalloid
- 2 tablets of oxycodone/acetaminophen
- 2 g of ceftriaxone or 2 mg/kg of gentamicin
- If fever drops by 2°C and patient can retain 2 glasses of water
- Discharge with fluoroquinolone for 2 wk.
- Follow up in 2 days.
Pregnancy Considerations
- Treat asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnancy with 4–7-day course of antibiotics:
- Nitrofurantoin:
- May cause birth defects if used in 1st trimester
- Contraindicated in G6PD-deficiency
- Amoxicillin (not 1st-line treatment due to high rate of resistance)
- Fosfomycin (safe and effective)
- TMP/SMX:
- SMX should be avoided late in pregnancy as kernicterus can result.
- TMP should be avoided in 1st trimester (folic acid antagonist; possible birth defects).
- Quinolones should be avoided:
- CNS reactions
- Blood dyscrasias
- Effects on collagen formation
MEDICATION
- Amoxicillin: 500 or 875 mg PO q12h
- Cefixime: 400 mg PO q24h
- Cefpodoxime: 400 mg PO q12h
- Ceftazidime: 1–2 g IV q8–12h
- Ceftriaxone: 1–2 g IV/IM q24h
- Cefuroxime: 250–500 mg PO q12h
- Cephalexin: 250–500 mg PO q6h
- Ciprofloxacin: 100–500 mg PO q12h
- Doripenem: 500 mg IV q8h
- Fosfomycin: 3 g single dose
- Gentamicin: 2 mg/kg IV or IM q8h
- Levofloxacin: 250 mg PO q24h
- Nitrofurantoin macrocrystals 100 mg PO q12h
- Norfloxacin: 400 mg PO q12
- Ofloxacin: 200 mg PO q12h or 400 mg IV q12h
- Phenazopyridine: 200 mg PO TID for 2 days:
- For symptomatic treatment of dysuria
- May turn urine and contact lenses orange
- TMP/SMX: 160 mg/800 mg PO q12h or 10 mg/kg/d IV div. q6–8–12h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Inability to comply with oral therapy
- Toxic appearing, unstable vital signs
- Pyelonephritis:
- Intractable symptoms
- Extremes of age
- Immunosuppression
- Urinary obstruction
- Consider if coexisting urolithiasis
- Significant comorbid disease
- Outpatient treatment failure
- Late in pregnancy
Discharge Criteria
- Well appearing, normal vital signs
- Can comply with oral therapy
- No significant comorbid disease
- Adequate follow-up (48–72 hr) as needed
- Healthy patients with uncomplicated pyelonephritis who respond to treatment in ED according to rule of 2s
- Pyelonephritis in early pregnancy with good follow-up may be treated as outpatients
Issues for Referral
Recurrent UTIs require workup for underlying pathology.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Follow-up for UTIs should start with primary care physician.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- For women who have more than 2 episodes of acute cystitis in 6 mo or 3 episodes in 1 yr, consider long-term (6–12 mo) prophylactic antibiotics or postcoital prophylaxis
- Pregnant women should be screened and treated for asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) because 20–40% of women with ASB progress to pyelonephritis.
- ASB in pregnant women associated with increased risk of preterm birth, low birth weight, and perinatal mortality.
- Treat ASB in renal transplant recipients, patients who have recently undergone a urologic procedure, and neutropenic patients.
- Risk factors for acute cystitis in men: Increased age, uncircumsized, HIV infection (low CD4 counts), anatomic abnormalities (BPH or urethral strictures), and sexual activity (especially insertive anal intercourse).
- 25% of male GU complaints are attributable to prostatitis. TMP/SMX or fluoroquinolones are 1st-line treatment.
- In patients with indwelling catheters, pyuria is less strongly correlated with UTI than in patients without catheters.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Gupta K, Hooton TM, Naber KG, et al. International clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of acute uncomplicated cystitis and pyelonephritis in women: A 2010 update by the Infectious Diseases Society of America and the European Society for Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.
Clin Infect Dis
. 2011;52:e103–e120.
- Hooton TM. Clinical practice. Uncomplicated urinary tract infection.
N Engl J Med
. 2012;366(11):1028–1037.
- Nicolle LE, Bradley S, Colgan R, et al. Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria in adults.
Clin Infect Dis.
2005;40:643–654.
- St. John A, Boyd JC, Lowes AJ, et al. The use of urinary dipstick tests to exclude urinary tract infection.
Am J Clin Pathol.
2006;126:428–436.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Pyelonephritis
- UTI, Pediatric
CODES
ICD9
- 590.80 Pyelonephritis, unspecified
- 595.9 Cystitis, unspecified
- 599.0 Urinary tract infection, site not specified
ICD10
- N12 Tubulo-interstitial nephritis, not spcf as acute or chronic
- N30.90 Cystitis, unspecified without hematuria
- N39.0 Urinary tract infection, site not specified
URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS, PEDIATRIC
Suzanne Z. Barkin
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Bacteria colonize via retrograde contamination of rectal or perineal flora:
- Infants—often hematogenous spread
- Older children—vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) major risk
- UTI is defined by culture of a single organism of >10,000/mL on a catheterized or suprapubic specimen. Other collection techniques are not routinely used in young children for definitive diagnosis.
- In infants 0–3 mo old, UTI is associated with a 30% incidence of sepsis.
- Predisposing factors:
- Poor perineal hygiene
- Short urethra of female
- Female > male
- Infrequent voiding
- Constipation
- Sexual activity
- Male circumcision probably reduces risk
ETIOLOGY
- UTI found in 4–7% of febrile infants
- Bacterial agents:
- Escherichia coli
accounts for 80%
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Enterobacter
species
- Proteus
species
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Enterococcus
species