Recurrent urinary tract infection

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Revision as of 12:36, 1 August 2022 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Background == * At least 2 UTIs (with cultures) in 6 months or 3 in 12 months * Most common in postmenopausal women == Management == * Acute treatment of urinary tract infection for each episode * Assess for red flags that may warrant further assessment, including pelvic mass, vaginal prolapse beyond the hymen, rectal prolapse, nephrolithiasis, chronic catheterization, immunosuppression, atypical symptoms (eg, gross hematuria, pneumaturia following...")
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Background

  • At least 2 UTIs (with cultures) in 6 months or 3 in 12 months
  • Most common in postmenopausal women

Management

Prevention

  • Drinking 2 to 3 L of water daily
  • Postcoital voiding
  • Wiping front to back
  • Low threshold for vaginal estrogen in post-menopausal women
  • Can consider methenamine 1 g twice daily for 1 year
    • Technically non-inferior to antibiotic prophylaxis, though likely not as effective[1]
  • Limited evidence for vitamin C, oral probiotics, vaginal Lactobacillus capsules, garlic extract, cranberry juice or extract, L-arginine, and D-mannose
    • However, it is probably quite safe to use cranberry extract, D-mannose, and probiotics
    • Vaginal Lactobacillus capsules are promising in early studies

Considerations for Specific Risk Factors

Risk Factor Prevention
Premenopausal woman related to sex postcoital voiding, avoid anal intercourse, postcoital antibiotic
Postmenopausal woman genitourinary atrophy vaginal estrogen (Estradiol 10mcg tablet inserted once daily 2 weeks then twice weekly forever)
related to sex postcoital voiding, avoid anal intercourse, postcoital antibiotic
Urinary catheterization catheter care
Poor bladder empyting refer to specialist
Diabetes mellitus manage glucosuria, assess bladder emptying (especially if neuropathy)
Advanced uterine prolapse refer to specialist for surgery or pessary
Enterovesical fistula pneumaturia consider suppressive antibiotics until resolved
Nephrolithiasis recurrences with same organism consider stone removal
Urethral diverticulum postvoid dribbling, dyspareunia, vaginal bulge consider suppressive antibiotics until diverticulum surgically corrected
Renal transplant pyelonephritis lower immunosuppression, consider suppressive antibiotic
asymptomatic bacteriuria treat as infection for first 3 to 12 months

Prophylactic Dosing

  • Reassess after 3 to 6 months after addressing underlying risk factors
Antibiotic Dosing
nitrofurantoin 50 to 100 mg p.o. once daily
TMP-SMX 0.5 to 1 SS tab p.o. once daily to 3 times weekly
cephalexin 125 to 250 mg p.o. once daily
fosfomycin 3 g p.o. once weekly

Further Reading

  1. Harding C, Mossop H, Homer T, Chadwick T, King W, Carnell S, Lecouturier J, Abouhajar A, Vale L, Watson G, Forbes R, Currer S, Pickard R, Eardley I, Pearce I, Thiruchelvam N, Guerrero K, Walton K, Hussain Z, Lazarowicz H, Ali A. Alternative to prophylactic antibiotics for the treatment of recurrent urinary tract infections in women: multicentre, open label, randomised, non-inferiority trial. BMJ. 2022 Mar 9;376:e068229. doi: 10.1136/bmj-2021-0068229. PMID: 35264408; PMCID: PMC8905684.