Background
Bacterial infection of the urinary tract, either lower (cystitis) or upper (pyelonephritis)
When UTI causes sepsis syndrome, often referred to as urosepsis
Microbiology
Gram-negative bacteria
Gram-positive bacteria
Viruses
Risk Factors
Premenopausal women: sexual intercourse, new partner, no postcoital voiding, spermicide use, prior UTI, diabetes mellitus
Postmenopausal women: genitourinary atrophy/estrogen deficiency, urethral diverticulum, vaginal prolapse beyond the hymen, incontinence, postvoid residual, catheterization
Men: reduced prostatic secretions (older men), postvoid residual, incontinence, catheterization
Clinical Manifestations
Acute simple cystitis: acute UTI without signs of upper tract infection or systemic symptoms
Acute complicate UTI: acute UTI with fever, chills, malaise, flank pain, CVA tenderness, or (in men) pelvic/perineal pain
Diagnostic criteria include clinical and laboratory symptoms:
Two or more clinical symptoms:
Fever > 38ºC
Urinary urgency or frequency
Acute dysuria
Hypogastric pain
Costovertebral angle tenderness
One or more laboratory finding:
Bacteriuria (> 100,000 CFUs/mL)
Pyuria (>10 WBCs/HPF)
Investigations
Urinalysis
Leukocyte esterase
Nitrite, positive for organisms that convert nitrate to nitrite such as the Gram-negative bacteria
High negative predictive value if both LE and nitrite are negative
Urine microscopy
Pyuria indicated by 5-10 cells per HPF
Management
Acute afebrile UTI in men: 7 days ciprofloxacin or cotrimoxazole 1
Acute afebrile UTI in women:
First-line antibiotics
Second-line is a β-lactam
Last-line is a fluoroquinolone
ESBLs
Uncomplicated UTIs:
Complicated UTIs and pyelonephritis:
References
^ Dimitri M. Drekonja, Barbara Trautner, Carla Amundson, Michael Kuskowski, James R. Johnson. Effect of 7 vs 14 Days of Antibiotic Therapy on Resolution of Symptoms Among Afebrile Men With Urinary Tract Infection. JAMA . 2021;326(4):324. doi :10.1001/jama.2021.9899 .