Risk Factors Associated With Antimicrobial Resistance and Adverse Short-Term Health Outcomes Among Adult and Adolescent Female Outpatients With Uncomplicated Urinary Tract Infection

Author:

Trautner Barbara W1ORCID,Kaye Keith S2ORCID,Gupta Vikas3ORCID,Mulgirigama Aruni4,Mitrani-Gold Fanny S5,Scangarella-Oman Nicole E5,Yu Kalvin3,Ye Gang3,Joshi Ashish V5

Affiliation:

1. Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine , Houston, Texas , USA

2. Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School , New Brunswick, New Jersey , USA

3. Becton, Dickinson and Company , Franklin Lakes, New Jersey , USA

4. GSK, Brentford , London , United Kingdom

5. GSK, Collegeville , Pennsylvania , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Increasing antimicrobial resistance makes treating uncomplicated urinary tract infections (uUTIs) difficult. We compared whether adverse short-term outcomes among US female patients were more common when initial antimicrobial therapy did not cover the causative uropathogen. Methods This retrospective cohort study used data from female outpatients aged ≥12 years, with a positive urine culture and dispensing of an oral antibiotic ±1 day from index culture. Isolate susceptibility to the antimicrobial initially dispensed, patient age, and history of antimicrobial exposure, resistance, and all-cause hospitalization within 12 months of index culture were evaluated for associations with adverse outcomes during 28-day follow up. Outcomes assessed were new antimicrobial dispensing, all-cause hospitalization, and all-cause outpatient emergency department/clinic visits. Results Of 2366 uUTIs, 1908 (80.6%) were caused by isolates susceptible and 458 (19.4%) by isolates not susceptible (intermediate/resistant) to initial antimicrobial treatment. Within 28 days, patients with episodes caused by not susceptible isolates were 60% more likely to receive a new antimicrobial versus episodes with susceptible isolates (29.0% vs 18.1%; 95% confidence interval, 1.3–2.1; P < .0001). Other variables associated with new antibiotic dispenses within 28 days were older age, prior antimicrobial exposure, or prior nitrofurantoin-not-susceptible uropathogens (P < .05). Older age, prior antimicrobial-resistant urine isolates, and prior hospitalization were associated with all-cause hospitalization (P < .05). Prior fluoroquinolone-not-susceptible isolates or oral antibiotic dispensing within 12 months of index culture were associated with subsequent all-cause outpatient visits (P < .05). Conclusions New antimicrobial dispensing within the 28-day follow-up period was associated with uUTIs where the uropathogen was not susceptible to initial antimicrobial treatment. Older age and prior antimicrobial exposure, resistance, and hospitalization also identified patients at risk of adverse outcomes.

Funder

GSK

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Oncology

Reference23 articles.

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2. An introduction to the epidemiology and burden of urinary tract infections;Medina;Ther Adv Urol,2019

3. Diagnosis and management of uncomplicated urinary tract infections;Mehnert-Kay;Am Fam Physician,2005

4. The epidemiology of urinary tract infection;Foxman;Nat Rev Urol,2010

5. Diagnosis and treatment of acute uncomplicated cystitis;Colgan;Am Fam Physician,2011

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