CA-UTI: Empiric Diagnosis
Pearl: CA-UTI is defined as the presence of a urinary catheter for within past 48 hours of symptom onset, presence of signs or symptoms compatible with UTI, absence of other infectious source, and significant bacteriuria* with one or more species. (IDSA CA-UTI guidelines)
*“Significant” bacteriuria varies and is arbitrary. A higher cutoff makes it less likely to be the result of contamination. Per 2009 IDSA CA-UTI guidelines, “a quantitative count of greater than or equal to 1,000 colony forming units for symptomatic persons… is recommended as representing significant bacteriuria, because this threshold is a reasonable compromise between sensitivity in detecting CA-UTI and feasibility for the microbiology laboratory [minimum detection] in quantifying organisms.”
- Determine prostatitis/GU infection in men. Prostatitis, epididymitis, and epididymo-orchitis have different duration of therapy and antibiotic selection based on bioavailability. That is outside the scope of this guide. See NEJM
- Encourage hydration
- Review prior sensitivities for empiric antibiotics or local antibiogram
- Starting antibiotics
- See antibiotic selection guide
- Duration of therapy (per 2009 IDSA CA-UTI guidelines):
- 7 days of therapy if prompt response, otherwise 10-14 days
- Although not, could do 5 days of levofloxacin if used (but not for other fluoroquinolones)
- (For women younger than 65 without upper urinary symptoms and catheter removed, can consider a three-day regimen – but why would you be using GeriGuides for that youngster?)