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.