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® UROLOGY BOARD REVIEW MANUAL PUBLISHING STAFF PRESIDENT, GROUP PUBLISHER Bruce M. White EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Debra Dreger ASSISTANT EDITOR Tricia Carbone EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Barbara T. White EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS Acute and Complicated Urinary Tract Infection in Women Series Editor and Contributor: Bernard Fallon, MD Professor of Urology Department of Urology University of Iowa Iowa City, IA Jean M. Gaul PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Suzanne S. Banish PRODUCTION ASSOCIATE Mary Beth Cunney ADVERTISING/PROJECT MANAGER Patricia Payne Castle SALES & MARKETING MANAGER Deborah D. Chavis NOTE FROM THE PUBLISHER: This publication has been developed without involvement of or review by the American Board of Urology. Endorsed by the Association for Hospital Medical Education The Association for Hospital Medical Education endorses HOSPITAL PHYSICIAN for the purpose of presenting the latest developments in medical education as they affect residency programs and clinical hospital practice. Table of Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Acute Uncomplicated Cystitis . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Recurrent Uncomplicated Cystitis and Asymptomatic Bacteriuria. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Acute Uncomplicated Pyelonephritis . . . . . . 8 Complicated UTI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Future Directions in Treatment and Prevention of UTI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Cover Illustration by Christine Armstrong Copyright 2003, Turner White Communications, Inc., 125 Strafford Avenue, Suite 220, Wayne, PA 19087-3391, www.turner-white.com. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Turner White Communications, Inc. The editors are solely responsible for selecting content. Although the editors take great care to ensure accuracy, Turner White Communications, Inc., will not be liable for any errors of omission or inaccuracies in this publication. Opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Turner White Communications, Inc. Urology Volume 11, Part 3 1 UROLOGY BOARD REVIEW MANUAL Acute and Complicated Urinary Tract Infection in Women Bernard Fallon, MD INTRODUCTION Urinary tract infection (UTI) is an inflammation of the urothelium of the bladder (cystitis) or kidneys (pyelonephritis) secondary to invasion by bacteria or other organisms, which is usually characterized by bacteriuria and pyuria. UTI may occur as an isolated acute episode or as a series of recurrent infections with different bacterial isolates (a reinfection) or with an organism cultured from a previous infection (bacterial persistence). Persistent infection often is associated with anatomic or pathologic anomalies of the urinary tract or with the presence of a foreign body, such as a bladder drainage catheter. UTI may be classified as uncomplicated or complicated. Uncomplicated infections are those occurring in the absence of comorbid conditions, such as a structural abnormality of the urinary tract, urinary calculi, advanced age, or chronic disease (eg, diabetes mellitus). UTI is a common and costly illness that can be associated with severe morbidity and death. An estimated 150 million UTIs occur each year worldwide and cost $6 million in direct health care expenditures.1 In the United States, UTI is not a reportable disease, so it is difficult to accurately assess its incidence. Nevertheless, in 1997 UTI accounted for 7 million office visits and 1 million emergency department visits, resulting in 100,000 hospitalizations.2 The estimated annual cost of treating communityacquired UTIs in the United States is $1.6 billion.2 Catheter-associated UTI—the most common nosocomial infection in the United States—occurs at a rate of 1 to 1.5 million cases per year, affects 10% of short-term catheterized patients, and costs an estimated $400 per episode.3 Approximately 250,000 cases of acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis occur in the United States annually.4 UTIs are much more likely to occur in women than in men, affecting about 25% of women before age 40 and 50% during their lifetime. Sexually active young women are common victims of this illness, and incidence and prevalence increase with age. This manual examines the pathogenesis of bacterial UTIs in women and outlines a recommended clinical 2 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual approach to these infections. A discussion of nonbacterial UTIs as well as UTIs in men, children, and pregnant women is beyond the scope of this review. The majority of community-acquired UTIs in women are caused by Escherichia coli. In a recent analysis of 4342 urine isolates from women with an outpatient diagnosis of acute cystitis, E. coli was the identified uropathogen in 86% of cases; Staphylococcus saprophyticus accounted for another 4% of cases and other Enterobacteriaceae for the remainder.5 In most cases, uncomplicated UTI can be easily and effectively treated with appropriate antibiotic therapy. Given the expanding array of antibiotic choices, it is important that physicians choose carefully, as improper use of these medications can contribute to the growing problem of bacterial resistance. In part to help physicians make appropriate therapeutic choices, the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) recently published evidence-based guidelines for treatment of uncomplicated UTIs in women, which have been endorsed by the American Urologic Association.6 ACUTE UNCOMPLICATED CYSTITIS CASE PRESENTATION A 19-year-old woman presents to her family physician with a 24-hour history of urinary frequency and urgency, dysuria, and lower abdominal pain. The physician suspects acute bacterial cystitis, which leads her to probe for further historical details. The patient denies any other symptoms, including vaginal drainage or irritation or upper or lower gastrointestinal problems. She has never had a serious illness or surgery, and she has no history of past infections or recent exposure to antibiotic therapy. The patient recently became sexually active for the first time, with a partner who also was never previously sexually active. She uses a diaphragm for birth control. She has had no foreign travel. On physical examination the patient is afebrile, with normal vital signs. The remainder of the examination is A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n normal except for mild suprapubic tenderness and tenderness of the urethra and bladder on pelvic examination. The physician prescribes a 10-day course of oral levofloxacin (250 mg/day) for presumed acute uncomplicated UTI. She instructs the patient to return in 2 weeks for follow-up urinalysis. • Should this patient have undergone further evaluation? EVALUATION OF UNCOMPLICATED UTI It is reasonable to assume that this patient has an uncomplicated UTI. Her history essentially excludes any potential venereal, fungal, or gastrointestinal disease from the differential diagnosis. History and physical examination also reveal no evidence suggesting pyelonephritis, such as flank or back pain or fever. There is no history of previous stone disease, no rebound tenderness that might lead to a suspicion of appendicitis or other acute gastrointestinal conditions, and little possibility of pregnancy. Two simple noninvasive tests are available for diagnosing uncomplicated UTI in the office: microscopic analysis of the urinary sediment and urine culture and sensitivity testing. Current evidence suggests that it is acceptable to treat patients with uncomplicated UTI empirically, without obtaining urinalysis or urine culture and sensitivity testing. However, the rapidity and accuracy of urine dipstick testing plus microscopic examination of the urine would argue for performing these tests in patients seen in ambulatory settings. Although not as reliable for confirming UTI, the urine dipstick test is sufficient for guiding therapy when it confirms the presence of inflammatory cells (leukocyte esterase) and/or gramnegative bacteria (nitrite). Microscopic evaluation confirms the diagnosis in most cases and may occasionally support the diagnosis when the dipstick test is negative. Urinalysis Urinalysis is easily performed and relatively reliable for diagnosing UTI. In most cases a midstream voided urine specimen should be collected, although catheterization may be necessary in some very obese patients. Suprapubic aspiration is rarely necessary in adults. In one study, simple urinalysis was 95.8% sensitive in detecting culture-proven UTI, but the positive predictive value (PPV) was only 45%; the PPV increased to 100% if testing for both leukocyte esterase and nitrite were positive.7 The sensitivity of microscopic detection of infection was 100%; the specificity was only 40% but increased to 94% if more than 10 bacteria/µL or more than 50 leuko- cytes/µL were seen (Figure 1; see page 8).7 The negative predictive value of no detectable leukocytes was 95%.7 The need for urinalysis in uncomplicated UTI can be questioned on the basis of some recent studies. In one study, patients with a history of recurrent uncomplicated UTIs were reported to accurately self-diagnose and self-treat infection.8 Patient self-diagnosis of UTI was proven by culture results in 84% of cases, with another 11% having pyuria, and clinical and bacteriologic cures were achieved in 92% and 96% of patients, respectively.8 In another study comparing telephonebased to office-based management of suspected UTI, telephone diagnosis and treatment was supported by positive single-organism culture results in 64% of patients.9 In addition, patients in both study groups reported equal symptom scores and treatment satisfaction rates at 0, 3, and 10 days post-treatment.9 Urine Culture and Sensitivity Testing Performed properly, a urine culture can definitively diagnose UTI. The test typically is regarded as positive when 105 or more colony-forming units of microbe per milliliter of cultured urine are found. However, in as many as 40% of UTIs, urine cultures may grow less colony-forming units, because of less incubation time in the frequently emptied bladder and slow doubling time in urine.10 Urine cultures require time for processing and growth plus additional time to identify the microbe and determine antibiotic sensitivity. Delaying treatment until culture and sensitivity results are available is unwarranted in cases of uncomplicated UTI, as clinical response to empiric therapy typically occurs before results return, allowing patients to feel better quicker and avoid the added costs of diagnosis. However, if a patient continues to be symptomatic after empiric therapy, urine culture and sensitivity testing followed by appropriate antibiotic treatment would be indicated. • Was the treatment prescribed for this patient appropriate? TREATMENT OF ACUTE UNCOMPLICATED CYSTITIS The IDSA guidelines recommend that standard initial empiric therapy for acute uncomplicated cystitis in a healthy, nonpregnant woman should be a 3-day course of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMZ).6 The guidelines also note that trimethoprim alone and ofloxacin are equivalent to TMP-SMZ in efficacy and that other fluoroquinolones are probably similar in effectiveness. However, unless bacterial resistance to TMP-SMZ is known to be a problem in the area, the fluoroquinolones are not recommended as first-line therapy due to Urology Volume 11, Part 3 3 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n Table 1. Modes of Action and Resistance of Various Antibiotic Classes Antibiotic Class Mode of Action Mode of Bacterial Resistance β-Lactams (penicillin, cephalosporins) Inhibit cell wall mucopeptide synthesis; bactericidal β-Lactamase production; change in cell wall pore size and penicillin binding site Nitrofurantoin Inhibits protein and cell wall synthesis; interferes with metabolism; bactericidal Unknown TMP-SMX Inhibits dihydrofolate reductase; bactericidal Increased folate acquisition from tissues Quinolones Inhibit DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV; bactericidal Mutation in DNA gyrase binding site; change in cell wall pore size Aminoglycosides Block 30-S ribosomal subunit, inhibiting protein synthesis; bactericidal Production of aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes and decreased drug uptake TMP-SMX = trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. (Adapted with permission from Schaeffer AJ. Urinary tract infections. In: Walsh PC, Retik AB, Vaughan ED Jr, Wein AJ, editors. Campbell’s urology. 8th ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 2002:539.) their higher cost and the unnecessary risk of promoting fluoroquinolone resistance.6 Although the treatment chosen by the case physician is likely to be successful, a less expensive antibiotic than levofloxacin (a fluoroquinolone), such as nitrofurantoin or TMP-SMX, would be more appropriate. E. coli sensitivity to these older antibiotics is still adequate to expect successful elimination of the infection. Physicians have come to expect that new, effective antibiotics will continue to be developed and made available. It is certain that these medications will be increasingly costly, but it is also possible that the misuse of effective agents may ultimately result in bacterial metabolism adapting to the point of panresistance. Until 1995, ciprofloxacin was the dominant fluoroquinolone used for UTI treatment.11 The more expensive levofloxacin was introduced in 1997 and is now used far more often than the once popular ciprofloxacin.12 Yet, the in vitro activity of ciprofloxacin against E. coli, Proteus mirabilis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa remains equal to or greater than that of levofloxacin.13 As use of fluoroquinolones increases among those treating UTIs, greater resistance can be anticipated in uncomplicated infections. A second criticism of the treatment prescribed for the case patient is the duration of therapy (10 days). In reviewing the available evidence, the IDSA concluded that a 3-day course of therapy is equally effective as a 7- or 10-day course in acute uncomplicated cystitis, with less risk of side effects.6 A 3-day course is superior, however, to 1 day of therapy.6 Continuing symptoms after 3 days of therapy warrant a follow-up evaluation, including a urine culture. In patients who respond quickly to therapy, follow-up is not strictly necessary, but a urinalysis is often done about 2 weeks following treatment. 4 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual Antimicrobial Resistance The common bacterial causes of UTI, most notably E. coli, are generally highly sensitive to the commonly used antibiotics. However, treatment of UTI is complicated by the increasing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant strains of E. coli. Table 1 lists the mechanism of action of various antibiotics used to treat UTI as well as identified modes of resistance. As various antibiotics have become more popular, resistance of common bacteria has increased (Table 2). For example, E. coli resistance to fluoroquinolones increased from less than 1% in 1991 to about 6% in 2000.12 Fluoroquinolone resistance of nonE. coli isolates is significantly higher in women older than age 50 than in those younger than 50.14 Evidence suggests that community laboratories may overestimate resistance rates. For example, in a study from New Zealand, the rate of trimethoprim resistance of E. coli in urine isolates sent to the central study laboratory was 11.5%, compared with cumulative resistance rates of 19% reported by local community laboratories.15 In the United States, antibiotic resistance rates have been found to vary significantly from one region to another. For instance, in a national study based on more than 100,000 isolates, resistance of E. coli to TMPSMX varied from 10% in the Northeast to 22% in the West (P < 0.001).14 In another study analyzing the clonal composition of E. coli, 28 of 55 (51%) TMPSMX–resistant E. coli isolates from California were clonal group A, and 18 of 47 (38%) isolates from Michigan and Minnesota were clonal group A.16 Most of these clonal group A isolates were serotype O11:H(nt) or O77:H(nt); only 4% of the TMP-SMX–sensitive E. coli were clonal group A.16 The fact that urine culture and sensitivity testing is obtained more frequently in cases of initial antibiotic failure to eradicate infection may A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n produce bias toward overestimation of resistance rates in many studies. Also, because many antibiotics achieve extremely high levels in urine, in vitro resistance does not necessarily translate into clinical failure. CASE CONCLUSION The patient’s symptoms improve within 24 hours. After 5 days, the patient stops taking the levofloxacin and stores the remaining 5 pills in her medicine cabinet in case she develops another infection in the future. A urinalysis obtained 2 weeks later is normal. At the followup visit, her physician suggests that she may want to switch to using birth control pills rather than a diaphragm. A diaphragm, she explains, may cause pressure on the urethra, increasing the likelihood of bacterial ingress, and the spermicide on the diaphragm may be bactericidal to vaginal lactobacilli, promoting coliform colonization.17 RECURRENT UNCOMPLICATED CYSTITIS AND ASYMPTOMATIC BACTERIURIA CASE PRESENTATION A 44-year-old married woman presents to her primary care physician with symptoms of urinary frequency, small voided volumes, and dysuria. The patient has a history of recurrent UTI beginning at age 18. She has experienced an average of 2 to 3 infections per year, which always respond within a few days to antibiotic therapy. On occasion she has not sought treatment, and the infections have subsided spontaneously. Her physician occasionally obtains urine culture and sensitivity testing. Most cultures reveal E. coli as the cause, although in one case several years ago P. aeruginosa was identified. On physical examination the patient is afebrile, with normal vital signs. The examination is significant only for suprapubic tenderness. Microscopic urinalysis in the office reveals many bacteria and white blood cells. A urine specimen is sent for culture and sensitivity testing. • What bacterial and host factors reduce or increase the likelihood of uncomplicated UTI? Generally speaking, an uncomplicated UTI may become established when uropathogenic organisms colonize the vaginal introitus and periurethral area and subsequently ascend into the lower urinary tract (bladder) or upper tract (one or both kidneys) and elicit a host response. Several bacterial and host factors interact to make UTI more or less likely to occur. Table 2. Uncomplicated Urinary Tract Infection: Resistance Trends Drug 1992 1996 Ampicillin 29% 38% Cephalothin 20% 28% TMP-SMX 8% 16% Ciprofloxacin 0.3% 0.3% Nitrofurantoin 7% 6% TMP-SMX = trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. (Data from Gupta K, Scholes D, Stamm WE. Increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among uropathogens causing acute uncomplicated cystitis in women. JAMA 1999;281:736–8.) BACTERIAL VIRULENCE FACTORS IN UTI Certain strains of uropathogenic E. coli possess bacterial characteristics that appear to influence the occurrence and severity of UTI. Adherence to Host Epithelial Cells Bacterial adherence to host epithelial cells was first described in 1977.18 It is now known that uropathogenic E. coli may have several types of fimbriae (also called pili) involved in adhesion to bladder or kidney epithelial cells. Type 1 fimbriae. Type 1 fimbriae are found in almost all cases of E. coli cystitis.19 Type 1 fimbriae bind to mannose in mucoprotein and are said to be mannose-sensitive, as they produce hemagglutination in the presence of mannose. The typical type 1 fimbriated bacterium has 200 to 500 pili on its surface, each about 7 nm long and 1 µm wide. They are mainly composed of about 1000 copies of the protein FimA, which recognizes the host receptor.20 Type 1 fimbriae recognize and bind to glycoproteins on urothelium, which is the first step in UTI development.21 They also facilitate invasion into the superficial cells and perhaps into deeper epithelial cells, thus providing a more stable environment for the invading bacteria than superficial urothelial cells, which may slough off as a result of inflammatory reaction to the infection.22 Type 1 fimbriae activate bladder mast cells, possibly resulting in the release of inflammatory mediators (eg, histamine, tumor necrosis factor-α [TNF-α], leukotriene B4). These molecules may account for the urinary symptoms of frequency, urgency, and pain on voiding.23 Of some interest is the finding that cranberry juice inhibits the binding of type 1 fimbriated E. coli to urinary mucosal cells.24 P fimbriae. P fimbriae are mannose-insensitive, producing hemagglutination in vitro in the absence of Urology Volume 11, Part 3 5 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n mannose. P fimbriae bind to glycolipids found on P blood group antigens and renal uroepithelial cells. In one study, P fimbriae were found on 91% of E. coli isolates producing pyelonephritis and only 19% of those causing cystitis.25 As with type 1 fimbriae, P fimbriae are phase-variable (ie, the fimbriae are not always present on the bacteria). Pathogenicity is greater in the fimbriated phase. In addition to enhancing bacterial colonization of upper tract urothelium, P fimbriae increase the host response to UTI, as indicated by increased neutrophil numbers in the urine and higher levels of the cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8. P fimbriae also reduce the number of bacteria needed to establish colonization of the urine, as demonstrated by successive cultures and colony counts.26 Other E. coli adhesins. Two other E. coli adhesins (ie, X fimbriae and S fimbriae) have been identified, and new families of adhesins are being described. An example is the O75X adhesin, originally named for the E. coli serotype with which it is associated. It is now included in the Dr family of nonfimbriated adhesins, which have a common receptor—the Dr(a+) blood group antigen— localized on the decay-accelerating factor (DAF) molecule, which protects tissues from autologous complement attack.27 The Dr adhesins are the third most common colonization factors. Children and pregnant women are the groups most likely to be infected with Dr-expressive E. coli. Dr adhesins also are associated with a higher risk of recurrent UTI.28 Genetic Characteristics of Uropathogenic Strains Uropathogenic E. coli strains have genomes that are 20% longer than other, nonpathogenic fecal strains.29 They also have pathogenicity islands, which are pieces of DNA not found in the genomes of nonpathogenic strains. Pathogenicity islands are more often associated with E. coli strains that cause pyelonephritis than strains that produce cystitis. These DNA segments have genes for the production of type 1 and P fimbriae, toxins (eg, α-hemolysin, cytotoxic necrotizing factor, capsular and O antigens), and iron-uptake systems such as aerobactin.30 The pap operon is responsible for the production of P fimbriae; hemolysin production is controlled by hlyA.31 Other genes may allow uropathogenic E. coli to accumulate iron from the tissues. Pathogenicity islands are unstable and variable and may allow bacteria to adapt to their environment as a UTI progresses. Deletions of these DNA segments could conceivably allow for future development of nonpathogenic strains to be used in vaccination of patients who are victims of frequent UTIs. 6 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual HOST FACTORS IN UTI Mechanical and Physiologic Factors An important host defense mechanism is normal voiding, which flushes the offending organisms. Likewise, ureteral peristalsis helps to block the ascent of pathogens to the kidneys. A large fluid intake may help by diluting the concentration of bacteria and causing more frequent voiding. The relatively low pH of urine, along with urea and organic acid concentration, also inhibit bacterial growth.32 In premenopausal women, the vagina has a thick, vascular, estrogen-rich epithelial layer that facilitates colonization by lactobacilli. These lactobacilli metabolize glucose to lactic acid and maintain a pH of 3.5 to 4.5, producing a hostile environment for uropathogenic bacteria. Overuse of antibiotics, spermicides, or antifungal agents may decrease Lactobacillus colonization, increasing vaginal pH and leading to colonization with uropathogenic E. coli. Immunologic Factors Increased epithelial cell receptivity to uropathogens and local humoral immune response are believed to play a role in UTI development in certain women. In one study, 30 women with a history of recurrent UTI were compared with 30 controls, and the concentrations of serum and urine antibodies against mixed coliform antigen and clinical isolates were determined via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA); the surface hydrophobicity of the organisms also was determined. Women with a history of recurrent UTI had increased vaginal binding of bacteria as well as low urine levels of secretory IgA, indicating lower local immunity.33 Lewis blood group antigens also appear to play a role in development of UTI. Women who are Le(a+b+) or Le(a–b+) phenotypes are said to be secretors, and those who are Le (a+b–) or Le (a–b–) are nonsecretors. Secretors have fewer UTIs. In a population of women with acute, uncomplicated pyelonephritis, 41% were nonsecretors, compared with a noninfected control group in which 22% were nonsecretors (P < 0.001).34 The protective effect of the secretor phenotype may be due to fucosylated structures at the cell surface in the urothelium, which decrease receptor availability for the bacteria.35 Nonsecretors may have specific E. coli–binding glycolipids on the urothelial cell membrane.36 Tamm-Horsfall mucoprotein is produced in the loop of Henle and distal convoluted tubule and is found in the surface mucin lining the urothelium. Type 1 fimbriae of uropathogenic E. coli adhere to Tamm-Horsfall A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n mucoprotein and are then unable to bind to the mucosal cells, thus reducing the likelihood of UTI.37 The urinary and vaginal epithelia are covered by thin layers of fluid containing antimicrobial proteins and peptides, such as lysosomes, lactoferrin, peroxidases, and defensins. Defensins are cationic peptides involved in regulating the immune response and inflammation, which are antimicrobial to many gram-positive and gramnegative organisms. Defensins also may be found in neutrophil granules and permeate the membrane pores of bacteria.38 HBD-1 is a β-defensin expressed in the kidney and female genital tract and found in urine, which is thought to form an antimicrobial barrier on uroepithelial cells. Its concentration rises 3-fold in pyelonephritis. Urinary pathogens are phagocytosed by leukocytes released in response to infection.39 Chemokines such as IL-6, IL-8, platelet-derived growth factor, and TNF-α are produced by epithelial cells in response to infection. IL-8 is attached to receptors CXCR1 and CXCR2 on neutrophils, aiding their recruitment across the infected epithelium. CXCR1 receptors have been found deficient in human pyelonephritis.40 Serum levels of IgM and IgA are elevated in pyelonephritis and probably aid in bacterial phagocytosis.41 These antibodies are not thought to be important in the prevention of further infection. • How do antibiotics gain access to bacteria? Antibiotic sites of action are in the periplasm, the inner (or cytoplasmic) membrane, and the cytoplasm of the bacterial cell. Antibiotics must cross the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria and the cytoplasmic membrane of all bacteria to gain access to their target molecules. Most antibiotics diffuse through pores in the lipid layers of the membranes.42 Change in pore size is one of the mechanisms by which bacteria may develop resistance to various antibiotics (eg, β-lactams, fluoroquinolones). Some antibiotics, such as rifamycin, are actively transported across the membranes and therefore are present in far higher concentrations within the cytoplasm of the bacteria, thus requiring much smaller doses to produce bactericidal activity. Study of the active transport mechanism of rifamycin may allow for the rational design of antibiotic molecules with similar abilities to cross bacterial membranes.43 • Returning to the case, what factors should guide management of this patient? MANAGEMENT OF RECURRENT UNCOMPLICATED CYSTITIS Recurrent infection is an annoying problem for many women who develop an initial UTI, but there is no evidence that recurrent UTI produces renal damage, hypertension, or other pathologic change. In one longitudinal study of 235 women with histories of UTI who were followed for a mean of 7.4 years, clusters of infections were noted to occur in 46% of the women, with 2 to 12 infections per cluster. Eighty-five percent of the isolates were E. coli; 50 different O groups were identified, but 3 of these (O4, O6, and O75) accounted for 49% of the infections.44 The mean number of infections in all patients was 0.6 per year; women who received prophylaxis had 0.8 infections per year, as opposed to 3.1 infections per year in those not receiving prophylaxis.44 Recurrent symptoms following an apparent cure can represent a relapse of the previous infection (ie, persistence of the same bacterial pathogen from within the urinary system) but more often are the result of a reinfection by another pathogen. Treatment and Prevention Essentially, the treatment of uncomplicated cystitis is the same regardless of whether it is a first or a recurrent episode. It is interesting to note, however, that up to 80% of acute uncomplicated UTIs in women will resolve without antibiotic therapy.45 In one randomized trial, 27 of 35 infections resolved within 3 days on nitrofurantoin, compared with 19 of 35 infections that cleared after 3 days on placebo (P = 0.008).46 It has been found that the rate of UTI recurrence in patients treated with antibiotics and in those who receive no treatment is similar (about 40%).45 Voiding within 15 minutes of intercourse reduces the relative risk of recurrent infection to 0.40.47 Prophylactic antibiotic therapy may prevent UTI while prophylaxis is ongoing, but the rate of infection returns to the previous level once the antibiotic is stopped.48 CASE CONCLUSION The patient’s physician is familiar with the IDSA guidelines for treatment of uncomplicated UTI and, on the basis of these recommendations, prescribes an initial dose of ciprofloxacin 250 mg twice daily for 3 days. The patient’s symptoms rapidly resolve. Her urine culture results return a significant growth of E. coli, and a follow-up urine culture 2 weeks later is negative for bacterial growth. The physician then prescribes TMP-SMX once daily for 6 months as prophylaxis against future infections, and the patient has no further UTIs during that time. Shortly afterward, the patient comes to the physician’s office for an unrelated complaint. Recalling an article he recently read, the physician relates information from a study indicating that heterosexual partners Urology Volume 11, Part 3 7 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n Figure 1. Microscopic urine specimen containing large numbers of bacteria and 5 to 10 leukocytes per high-power field. Culture revealed pansensitive Escherichia coli. Figure 2. Histologic specimen from a patient with acute pyelonephritis. The interstitium of the kidney is severely invaded by bacteria and polymorphonuclear leukocytes. were more likely to share uropathogenic E. coli than commensal E. coli.49 If this is true, the physician reasons, the patient may benefit from having her husband tested for the uropathogen and, if the test returns positive, treated. asymptomatic infection in lower-risk groups will usually be followed shortly by development of new infection by different strains that may be more difficult to eliminate or may produce acute symptomatology. • If this patient initially had been seen for a routine physical examination and was found to have asymptomatic bacteriuria, would it be appropriate to treat the infection? ACUTE UNCOMPLICATED PYELONEPHRITIS ASYMPTOMATIC BACTERIURIA Asymptomatic bacteriuria refers to the presence of significant numbers of bacteria in the urine in the absence of UTI symptoms. In general, it is recommended that asymptomatic bacteriuria not be treated, except in certain patients at higher risk (eg, diabetic or pregnant women). Even in diabetic patients with asymptomatic bacteriuria, treatment is controversial. Antibiotic therapy and placebo have been found to be associated with similar late acute infection rates, hospitalization rates, development of first symptomatology, and risk of acute pyelonephritis.50 Interestingly, in vitro studies have shown a much higher rate of adherence of type 1-fimbriated E. coli to the uroepithelium of diabetic patients than to uroepithelial cells of nondiabetic controls (P = 0.001).51 No difference in the rate of adherence of P fimbriated or nonfimbriated bacteria to either cell type was noted. Growth of Proteus species should be treated in an attempt to avoid struvite stone formation. More virulent organisms may produce a higher level of pyuria and local inflammation.52 E. coli is isolated less frequently in asymptomatic than in symptomatic infections. Treatment of 8 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual CASE PRESENTATION A 34-year-old woman who has had occasional UTIs in the past presents to her local emergency department with a 24-hour history of worsening nausea, vomiting, fever, and back pain. The patient reports that a day before the onset of these symptoms she began to experience urinary frequency, nocturia, and dysuria. Physical examination reveals suprapubic and right flank tenderness and a temperature of 40° C. There is no rebound tenderness. Urinalysis reveals multiple bacteria and leukocytes as well as 1 to 3 red blood cells per highpower field; the urine is positive for leukocyte esterase and nitrite on dipstick examination. The patient’s white blood cell count is 13,000/mm3. A urine specimen is sent for culture and sensitivity testing, and the patient is admitted to the hospital for treatment of presumed acute pyelonephritis. • How certain is the diagnosis? Should further blood tests or imaging studies be obtained? DIAGNOSIS OF ACUTE UNCOMPLICATED PYELONEPHRITIS This patient’s clinical presentation suggests acute pyelonephritis (Figure 2). Interestingly, there is no definitive test that confirms a diagnosis of pyelonephritis A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n rather than cystitis. All the characteristic signs and symptoms of acute pyelonephritis may sometimes be found in cases in which the infection is localized to the bladder by careful localization studies.53 However, these studies, including the bladder washout test54 or bilateral ureteral catheterization,55 are mainly of historical interest and require too much manipulation of the urinary tract to be of clinical use. Likewise, detection of antibody-coated bacteria by fluorescence assay56 or ELISA,57 which was initially felt to be diagnostic of pyelonephritis, has largely fallen into disuse because of the lack of sensitivity and specificity of these tests. Further blood tests beyond the initial complete blood count are not necessary in most patients. C-reactive protein may be elevated. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate will be quite high. These tests, however, are not recommended. Serum creatinine and electrolyte levels are unlikely to be abnormal unless both kidneys are involved or the patient is acutely ill or septic. Radiologic evaluation of the urinary tract also is unnecessary to make a diagnosis of acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis but may be indicated later, if the patient fails to respond to antibiotic therapy within a few days. • How should this patient be treated? Is hospitalization necessary? TREATMENT OF ACUTE UNCOMPLICATED PYELONEPHRITIS The bacteriology of acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis is the same as that of acute uncomplicated cystitis, and the sensitivity of the organisms is likely to be similar and broad. Many patients can be treated as outpatients. However, the IDSA guidelines recommend hospitalization for patients with high fever, chills, and very high white blood cell counts, to ensure that sepsis does not develop.6 In addition, those with significant nausea and vomiting may be admitted for rehydration and initial parenteral antibiotic therapy. In accord with the IDSA guidelines, because of this patient’s more severe symptoms, intravenous fluid administration is advisable along with parenteral antibiotic therapy for the first few days, until the illness begins to resolve.6 Antibiotics of choice include ciprofloxacin 400 mg every 12 hours, levofloxacin 500 mg every 12 hours, or ampicillin 1 g every 6 hours with gentamicin 1 to 1.5 mg/kg every 8 hours. When the acute illness has resolved, the patient could be released from the hospital on oral therapy with TMP-SMX or a quinolone. Treatment is continued for a total of 7 days, which is adequate for cure of pyelonephritis.58 For treatment of pyelonephritis on an outpatient basis, 7 days of ciprofloxacin 500 mg twice daily, levofloxacin 500 mg once daily, or gatifloxacin 400 mg once daily may be considered as equivalently effective regimens.59 Continuing fever with an elevated white blood cell count may be an indication of a structural abnormality of the urinary tract or the development of a complication, such as an abscess (Figure 3). In a case of acute pyelonephritis, intravenous pyelography (IVP) will typically show increased size of the affected kidney, which may be focal enlargement if the infection is limited to a particular area, along with delayed excretion of the contrast medium and some mild dilation of the collecting system and ureter on delayed films. Plain films of the abdomen should be carefully examined for the presence of a stone. Gas shadows could alert one to the presence of emphysematous pyelonephritis. Ultrasonography is quite nonspecific in pyelonephritis but may serve to rule out a renal stone, abscess, or tumor. Computed tomography is superior to IVP or ultrasonography in detecting anatomic abnormalities or complications of the acute infection. Any precipitating or complicating conditions discovered on radiologic evaluation will need to be appropriately treated, usually by ureteral or percutaneous drainage catheters, before the acute infection will respond well to antibiotics. CASE CONCLUSION The patient is treated with rehydration and intravenous levofloxacin (500 mg every 12 hours). No imaging studies are performed. The patient rapidly improves, and her white blood cell count drops to 7000/mm3. She is discharged after 2 days and placed on oral levofloxacin (500 mg/day) for another 7 days. Two weeks later, follow-up urine culture and sensitivity testing are negative for bacterial growth. The patient has no further UTIs during a follow-up period of 4 years. COMPLICATED UTI CASE PRESENTATION A 64-year-old woman presents to the emergency department of her local hospital. She has become increasingly ill at home over a 10-day period. She initially developed dysuria and urinary frequency but more recently noted bilateral flank and back discomfort and mild fever, which have worsened over the last 3 days. She reports that she has had several UTIs in the past 5 years, and antibiotic therapy with cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones has produced symptomatic relief within 1 or 2 weeks in all previous episodes. She has Urology Volume 11, Part 3 9 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n B A never undergone imaging studies. The patient has had insulin-dependent diabetes for 30 years. Three years ago she underwent a vaginal operation for stress incontinence, but she still has leakage despite needing to strain to urinate. Physical examination reveals a woman who is 5′2′′ tall and weighs 180 lb. Her temperature is 41° C, blood pressure is 110/60 mm Hg, and pulse is 106 bpm. Her skin appears dehydrated. Her head, neck, heart, and lung examinations are within normal limits, as is her sensorium. Her abdomen is soft, with tenderness in the right costovertebral angle, flank, and right lower quadrant. Her genitalia are normal except for the presence of a cystocele. Her extremities are normal. A urethral catheter is passed and 1200 mL of foulsmelling urine drain. Urinalysis reveals numerous bacteria, white blood cells, and 10 to 15 red blood cells. A urine specimen is sent for culture and sensitivity testing. • What is the likely bacteriology of this patient’s infection? 10 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual Figure 3. Intravenous pyelogram (IVP) from a 45-year-old patient with fever and right flank pain unresponsive to an initial course of parenteral antibiotics. The right kidney was poorly visualized on the IVP, and a retrograde pyelogram (A) was performed, which revealed distortion of the right upper pole collecting system. An arteriogram (B) was then performed, showing no perfusion of the area. Renal abscess was diagnosed and treated by percutaneous drainage and antibiotic therapy. MICROBIOLOGY OF COMPLICATED UTI This patient is suffering from a complicated UTI. She is diabetic, postmenopausal, and does not empty her bladder well, and her history is worrisome for structural abnormalities of the urinary tract. These host complications are sufficient for significant infection, bacteremia, and septicemia to develop, even with colonization by relatively nonvirulent organisms such as enterococci. First complicated UTIs are likely to be caused by antibiotic-sensitive organisms, but subsequent infections are progressively more resistant. In some patients, bacteria are harbored within struvite stones and also on the biofilm that coats catheters and ureteral stents. If such stones and foreign bodies are not removed completely and associated anatomic abnormalities are not corrected, bacterial persistence will occur, often with multiple organisms,60 resulting in frequently recurring infection. Among women with complicated UTI, E. coli is the most common organism isolated (Table 3), with A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n P. mirabilis and Klebsiella pneumoniae also frequently found. Interestingly, E. coli strains isolated from complicated UTIs have less virulence genes and pathogenicity islands than those from uncomplicated acute UTIs. Of E. coli isolates from uncomplicated pyelonephritis cases, 84% were of known urovirulent serotypes compared with only 30% to 50% of those isolated in complicated infections.61 Also, P fimbrial expression is significantly lower in complicated UTIs. Similar observations have been made with E. coli strains isolated from patients with bacteremia due to complicated UTI, as compared to organisms isolated from patients with uncomplicated UTI.62 Table 3. Bacteriology of Complicated Urinary Tract Infection Pseudomonas aeruginosa 2.0–19.0 • What is biofilm? Others 6.1–20.0 Biofilm is a thin layer of organisms that may grow on uroepithelial surfaces, catheters, or stents. It is formed by the initial attachment of bacteria, which then secrete a matrix of glycocalices. Host salts and proteins, including Tamm-Horsfall mucoprotein, then complex with the matrix and may obstruct catheters and stents through deposition of struvite and calcium phosphate salts.63 The glycocalyx matrix protects the bacteria from antibiotic activity, antibodies, and phagocytosis. Catheter or stent biofilm is most likely to be associated with infection by Staphylococcus aureus and P. aeruginosa, but Proteus, Providencia, and Morganella species may also be involved.64 Urease-producing organisms convert urea to ammonia, thus increasing urinary pH and encouraging the deposition of struvite salts. This is the same process that accounts for the formation of struvite stones in the kidneys. Oral ciprofloxacin or ofloxacin has been found to adsorb on to stents at concentrations higher than the minimum inhibitory concentrations of many uropathogens65 and may be effective in preventing infection in patients who require stenting for relatively long periods, but not permanently. Gram-positive organisms • How should this patient be managed? What is appropriate treatment of complicated UTI? TREATMENT OF COMPLICATED UTI Treatment of complicated UTI varies with the severity of illness and nature of the underlying complications. Patients who are moderately ill (no fever, nausea, or vomiting) may be treated as outpatients. This patient, however, is very ill with high fever and could be on the verge of sepsis. Immediate laboratory investigations should include complete blood count, serum creatinine and electrolytes, blood glucose level, and arterial blood gases. A blood culture also is essential. Organism Prevalence (%) Gram-negative organisms Escherichia coli 21.0–54.0 Klebsiella pneumoniae 1.9–17.0 Enterobacter species 1.9–9.6 Citrobacter species 4.7–6.1 Proteus mirabilis 0.9–9.6 Providencia species 18.0 Enterococci 6.1–23.0 Group B streptococci 1.2–3.5 Coagulase-negative staphylococci 1.4–3.7 Staphylococcus aureus 0.9–2.0 Candida species 0–5.0 Adapted with permission from Nicolle LE. Urinary tract pathogens in complicated infection and in elderly individuals. J Infect Dis 2001;183 (Suppl 1):S6. Resuscitation with intravenous saline and an insulin pump should be started and intravenous broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy should be instituted immediately. Initial therapy most commonly is with ampicillin 2 g every 6 hours, plus gentamicin 1.5 mg/kg every 8 hours. This can be modified within a few days, depending on clinical response and urine culture results. A relatively high dose of an appropriate fluoroquinolone is recommended for 2 to 3 weeks thereafter. Radiologic studies should be obtained as soon as the patient is sufficiently stable to look for urinary tract structural abnormalities. It is exceedingly important to correct underlying anatomic abnormalities of the urinary tract in cases of complicated UTI, as excellent drainage of the urine is a primary defense mechanism. Thus, any obstructive lesions should be surgically corrected when clinically feasible (Figure 4). Catheters or stents of any type should be removed as soon as clinically possible and should be changed at regular, reasonably short intervals to prevent the accumulation of biofilm and entrenched bacteria. In one study of 250 patients with double J stents, those indwelling for 30 days or less had a colonization rate of 4.2%, whereas stents left for more than 90 days were colonized in 34% of cases. The colonization rate was 24% Urology Volume 11, Part 3 11 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN TREATMENT AND PREVENTION OF UTI Bacterial metabolism is increasingly understood, and the genomes of bacteria are being fully elucidated. Several areas of research show promise for the future treatment and prevention of UTI. A B Figure 4. Ureteropelvic junction (UPJ) obstruction in a 38-yearold patient with recurrent urinary tract infection associated with left flank pain. Urine culture revealed Proteus mirabilis. Radiologic investigation, including retrograde pyelogram (A), revealed UPJ obstruction on the left side. A double J stent was placed (B) for temporary drainage. in women and 14% in men, while it was 3.3% in patients with no systemic illness compared with 40% in patients with diabetes, chronic renal failure, and diabetic nephropathy.66 Stones in the upper urinary tract or bladder must be completely removed. Residual fragments, especially if relatively large, may continue to harbor and protect urease-producing organisms. CASE CONCLUSION The patient is admitted and treated as described above. She improves symptomatically within 5 days. Her temperature slowly returns to normal. Her initial blood cultures are positive for E. coli. Her urine culture and sensitivity testing grows E. coli and P. mirabilis, with colony counts greater than 105. An IVP is performed, which reveals a large stone in a small, hydronephrotic right kidney and a normal left kidney (Figure 5). A renal scan reveals that the left kidney has 80% of the total renal function and the right kidney 20%. As the patient improves, her antibiotic regimen is changed to levofloxacin 500 mg daily by mouth, in accordance with sensitivity results. She is started on intermittent catheterization and discharged from the hospital after 7 days. Her creatinine clearance is calculated to be 85 mL/min at discharge, and a right nephrectomy is performed without complication 2 weeks later. She is maintained on levofloxacin in the interval, and for another week after the nephrectomy is done. Pathologic examination of her kidney reveals chronic pyelonephritis and a struvite stone. 12 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual GLYCOSPHINGOLIPID DEPLETION Host cell surface glycosphingolipids (GSLs) act as receptors for the P fimbriae of many uropathogenic E. coli. NB-DNJ is a glucose analogue that inhibits the biosynthesis of ceramide-based GSLs. In vitro studies of NB-DNJ–treated human kidney cells exposed to a variety of P-fimbriated uropathogenic E. coli revealed progressively decreased bacterial adherence with increased concentrations of NB-DNJ, compared with no NB-DNJ treatment (control group).67 The same researchers fed NB-DNJ to mice for 14 days and subjected the mice to intravesical infection with P-fimbriated uropathogenic E. coli. Renal GSL content was reduced, urinary bacterial counts were reduced, and there was inhibition of neutrophil recruitment, indicating reduced mucosal inflammation.67 Further work in the area of GSL inhibition may lead to new strategies for preventing UTIs and less reliance on antibiotic therapy as prophylaxis, thus reducing the potential for development of resistant strains of uropathogenic E. coli. LOW-POTENCY ESTROGEN THERAPY Conjugated estrogens are high-potency hormones that are hydroxylated to the low-potency form of estriol, the main estrogen found in urine. Estriol binds selectively to vaginal receptors as opposed to endometrial receptors. Vaginal estriol application is an effective treatment for postmenopausal atrophic vaginitis and urinary symptoms.68 It is also known that vaginal lactobacilli can be restored in postmenopausal patients with vaginal estriol treatment. Women who received vaginal estriol in a randomized double-blind study had 0.5 episodes of UTI per year compared with 5.9 UTIs per year in those receiving placebo.69 In 60% of the estriol-treated group, vaginal Lactobacillus colonization was restored in less than 1 month (compared with 0% in the placebo group), and vaginal pH was reduced from the pretreatment level of 5.5 ± 0.7 to 3.6 ± 1.0 post-treatment. The risks of chronic use of low-potency estrogens in postmenopausal women for prevention of UTI are not well known. Certainly they are contraindicated in patients with endometrial or breast cancer, and in those A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n A B Figure 5. Intravenous pyelogram for case patient (ie, diabetic, postmenopausal woman with high fever, bilateral flank and back pain, and suspected urinary tract structural anomaly). (A) Plain abdominal film reveals a large right-sided calculus. There is no gas present to suggest emphysematous pyelonephritis. (B) After injection of contrast medium, the right renal collecting system appears dilated, with a filling defect produced by the stone in the middle and lower calyceal areas. The left kidney is normal. with hepatic or thromboembolic disease. Further research in this area may lead to reduction in UTI rates in elderly women and also reduction in antibiotic usage and resistance. PROBIOTICS Probiotics are living exogenous organisms that are administered to treat or prevent disease. Exogenous lactobacilli reduce the risk of UTI.70 Of the many strains of Lactobacillus, two may be most useful for colonization of the vagina—L. rhamnosus GR-1 and L. fermentum RC-14.71 These strains have been found to be adherent to uroepithelial and vaginal cells, resist spermicide, and produce surfactant that inhibits growth of many uropathogens. Larger clinical studies are required to demonstrate the effectiveness of probiotics in the treatment and prevention of UTI in younger as well as postmenopausal women. VACCINES The high incidence of UTI makes it an attractive disease for researchers to attempt vaccine development. Potential populations for vaccination might be the elderly, patients with diabetes or neurogenic bladder, and children with reflux, among others. One currently available vaccine, SolcoUrovac (Solco Basel Ltd., Basel, Switzerland), consists of heat-killed bacteria from 10 human uropathogenic strains (6 E. coli, 2 Proteus, 1 each of Enterococcus and Klebsiella). This vaccine has been used as a vaginal suppository in a randomized placebo-controlled study to prevent reinfections in women with histories of recurrent UTI and has been found to have no adverse reactions and to delay the interval to reinfection.72 Also in development are antibodies against FimH. The FimH adhesin is critical for the binding of type 1 fimbriated E. coli to bladder mucosa and has a role in cytokine and chemokine stimulation as well as leukocyte recruitment. Anti-FimH adhesin antibodies block bacterial binding to bladder cells in vitro.73 Active and passive immunization of mice with FimH reduced in vivo colonization of the bladder mucosa by more than 99% in the murine cystitis model.73 Urology Volume 11, Part 3 13 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n REFERENCES 1. Harding GKM, Ronald AR. The management of urinary infections: what have we learned in the past decade? 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Lancet 1971;2:615–8. 55. Stamey TA. Pathogenesis and treatment of urinary tract infections. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1980. 56. Thomas V, Shelokov A, Forland M. Antibody-coated bacteria in the urine and the site of urinary tract infection. N Engl J Med 1974;290:588–90. 57. Ratner JJ, Thomas VL, Sanford BA, Forland M. Bacteriaspecific antibody in the urine of patients with acute pyelonephritis and cystitis. J Infect Dis 1981;143:404–12. 58. Stamm WE, Hooton TM. Management of urinary tract infections in adults. N Engl J Med 1993;329:1328–34. 42. Nikaido H. Prevention of drug access to bacterial targets: permeability barriers and active efflux. Science 1994;264: 382–8. 59. Naber KG. Which fluoroquinolones are suitable for the treatment of urinary tract infections? Int J Antimicrob Agents 2001;17:331–41. 43. Braun V, Bos C, Braun M, Killman H. Outer membrane channels and active transporters for the uptake of antibiotics. J Infect Dis 2001;183 Suppl 1:S12–6. 60. Nicolle LE. Urinary tract pathogens in complicated infection and in elderly individuals. J Infect Dis 2001;183 Suppl 1:S5–8. 44. Vosti KL. Infections of the urinary tract in women: a prospective, longitudinal study of 235 women observed for 1–19 years. Medicine (Baltimore) 2002;81:369–87. 61. Sandberg T, Kaijser B, Lidin-Janson G, et al. Virulence of Escherichia coli in relation to host factors in women with symptomatic urinary tract infection. J Clin Microbiol 1988;26:1471–6. 45. Mabeck CE. Treatment of uncomplicated urinary tract Urology Volume 11, Part 3 15 A c u t e a n d C o m p l i c a t e d U r i n a r y Tr a c t I n f e c t i o n i n Wo m e n 62. Johnson JR, Moseley SL, Roberts PL, Stamm WE. Aerobactin and other virulence factor genes among strains of Escherichia coli causing urosepsis: association with patient characteristics. Infect Immun 1988;56:405–12. 68. Kicovic PM, Cortes-Prieto J, Milojevic S, et al. The treatment of postmenopausal vaginal atrophy with Ovestin vaginal cream or suppositories: clinical, endocrinological and safety aspects. Maturitas 1980;2:275–82. 63. Ramsay JW, Garnham AJ, Mulhall AB, et al. Biofilms, bacteria and bladder catheters. A clinical study. Br J Urol 1989;64:395–8. 69. Raz R, Stamm WE. A controlled trial of intravaginal estriol in postmenopausal women with recurrent urinary tract infections. N Engl J Med 1993;329:753–6. 64. Roberts JA, Fussell EN, Lewis RW. Bacterial adherence to penile prosthesis. Int J Impot Res 1989;1:167–78. 70. Reid G, Bruce AW, Taylor M. Instillation of Lactobacillus and stimulation of indigenous organisms to prevent recurrence of urinary tract infections. Microecol Ther 1995; 23:32–45. 65. Reid G, Habash M, Vachon D, et al. Oral fluoroquinolone therapy results in drug absorption on ureteral stents and prevention of biofilm formation. Int J Antimicrob Agents 2001;17:317–9. 66. Kehinde EO, Rotimi VO, Al-Awadi KA, et al. Factors predisposing to urinary tract infection after J ureteral stent insertion. J Urol 2002;167:1334–7. 67. Svensson M, Platt F, Frendeus B, et al. Carbohydrate receptor depletion as an antimicrobial strategy for prevention of urinary tract infection. J Infect Dis 2001;183 Suppl 1:S70–3. 71. Reid G, Bruce AW, Fraser N, et al. Oral probiotics can resolve urogenital infections. FEMS Immunol Med Microbiol 2001;30:49–52. 72. Uehling DT, Hopkins WJ, Balish E, et al. Vaginal mucosal immunization for recurrent urinary tract infection: phase II clinical trial. J Urol 1997;157:2049–52. 73. Langerman S, Ballou WR Jr. Vaccination using the FimCH complex as a strategy to prevent Escherichia coli urinary tract infections. J Infect Dis 2001;183 Suppl 1:S84–6. Copyright 2003 by Turner White Communications Inc., Wayne, PA. All rights reserved. 16 Hospital Physician Board Review Manual