RENAL

Asymptomatic Bacteriuria (ASB)

  • General Prevalence:
    • Common among elderly patients in community, residential aged care facilities, and hospitals.
    • Increases with age.
  • Men:
    • 0% in men aged 68-79 years.
    • 5.4% in men aged 90-103 years.
  • Women:
    • 13.6% in women aged 68-79 years.
    • 22.4% in women aged 90-103 years.
  • Institutionalized Patients:
    • Women: 25-50%.
    • Men: 15-35%.
  • Hospitalized Elderly Patients:
    • Women: 32-50%.
    • Men: 30-34%.
  • Stroke Patients:
    • 11.8% in subacute and chronic stroke patients.

Aetiology of ASB

  • Common Pathogens:
    • Escherichia coli: Most common.
    • Klebsiella pneumoniae.
    • Proteus mirabilis.
    • Enterococcus faecalis.
    • Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus.
    • Group B Streptococcus.
  • Institutionalized Patients:
    • Proteus mirabilis most frequently isolated.
  • Long-term Urinary Catheters:
    • Polymicrobial bacteriuria common.
    • Includes Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Morganella morganii, Providencia stuartii.

Risk Factors for ASB

  • Structural Abnormalities:
    • Renal calculi: Cause irritation, inflammation, urinary stasis, and obstruction.
  • Comorbid Conditions:
    • Alzheimer’s dementia.
    • Parkinson’s disease.
    • Cerebrovascular disease: Affect bladder motility and continence.
    • Diabetes mellitus: Neurogenic bladder, diabetic microangiopathy, hyperglycemia-induced immune impairment.
    • Primary biliary cirrhosis: Increased ASB risk.
  • High Postvoid Residual (PVR) Volume:
    • PVR >180 mL in asymptomatic men: 87% predictive value for positive urine culture.
    • Higher mean PVR associated with UTI in asymptomatic male patients.
  • Indwelling Catheter:
    • Short-term catheterization: 9-23% ASB prevalence.
    • Long-term catheterization (>30 days): 100% ASB prevalence.
  • Community Dwelling Elderly:
    • Urinary incontinence: OR 2.99.
    • Reduced mobility: OR 2.68.
    • Estrogen treatment: OR 2.20.
  • Chronic Constipation:
    • Risk factor for lower urinary tract symptoms and ASB.
    • Potential to cause progressive neuropathy in the pelvic floor and urinary retention.
    • Associated with urinary incontinence (OR 1.46).
    • Can lead to overflow fecal incontinence and perineal soiling, increasing infection risk.

Diagnosis of Asymptomatic Bacteriuria (ASB) in Elderly Patients

  • Challenges:
    • Difficult to diagnose ASB and decide against antibiotics in clinical practice, especially in elderly.
    • Elderly patients may have language barriers or cognitive impairments, making history-taking unreliable.
    • Nonspecific systemic symptoms (lethargy, weakness, loss of appetite) complicate diagnosis.
  • Long-term Care Facilities:
    • Multiple triggers for urine cultures, including nonspecific symptoms (irritability, aggressiveness).
    • Reliance on nursing staff judgment for ordering urine cultures, but information may be incomplete or unreliable.
  • Urine Sample Collection:
    • Difficult for elderly patients to produce clean-catch samples, leading to contaminated and hard-to-interpret results.
    • Fever and leukocytosis are less common in elderly, making infection detection challenging.
  • Urine Dipstick:
    • Not reliable for diagnosing ASB or cystitis.
    • Useful as a ‘rule out’ test if nitrate and leukocyte esterase are both negative.
    • Positive leukocyte esterase correlates with bacteriuria in only 50% of patients.
    • Pyuria is not a sensitive or specific predictor of bacteriuria in the elderly.
  • Urinary Cytokines:
    • Testing for urinary cytokines (e.g., IL-6) has shown promise but requires larger trials for validation.
    • IL-6: 81% sensitivity, 96% specificity.
    • Leukocyte esterase: 88% sensitivity, 79% specificity.

Complications of ASB in Elderly Patients

  • Mortality:
    • Early studies suggested reduced survival, but recent studies show no significant difference in mortality.
    • ASB in men previously associated with increased cancer frequency, but not increased mortality.
  • Morbidity:
    • No proven increase in morbidity from ASB.
    • Studies show no association between ASB and reduced creatinine clearance or new onset hypertension in diabetic women.
  • Infection Risk:
    • Some association with acute cystitis in postmenopausal women and urosepsis in diabetic patients.
    • No proven benefit from antimicrobial treatment in reducing mortality or genitourinary morbidity.

Management of ASB

  • Guidelines:
    • Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) and Australian guidelines recommend against routine screening and treatment of ASB in elderly, community dwellers, or institutionalized patients.
    • Antibiotics not recommended for patients with indwelling catheters, diabetic women, or those with spinal cord injury.
  • Risks of Unnecessary Treatment:
    • Adverse effects of antibiotics.
    • Development of resistant organisms.
    • Increased risk of drug interactions and Clostridium difficile diarrhea.
  • When to Treat:
    • Patients with abnormal urinary tracts or persistent bacteriuria 48 hours after clean intermittent catheterization, genitourinary manipulation, or instrumentation with high mucosal bleeding risk.
    • Symptomatic bacteriuria (bacteremia with same organism, acute pyelonephritis, acute lower tract symptoms, catheter trauma/obstruction).
  • Prevention Measures:
    • Avoid long-term indwelling catheters.
    • Use sterile technique for catheter insertion.
    • Good catheter care, early detection of blockage, and prevention of constipation with oral laxatives.
    • Systemic antimicrobial agents not routinely used post-catheterization due to cost, side effects, and resistance.
    • Intravaginal estriol and cranberry juice may help prevent ASB.

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