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      Prospective assessment of catheter-associated bacteriuria in nursing home residents: clinical presentation, epidemiology, and colonization dynamics

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      medRxiv

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          Abstract

          Background

          Long-term catheterization facilitates continuous bacteriuria, for which the clinical significance is unclear. The objectives of this study were to determine the clinical presentation, epidemiology, and dynamics of bacteriuria in a cohort of catheterized nursing home residents.

          Methods

          Prospective weekly urine collection, culture, urinalysis, chart review, and assessment of possible signs and symptoms of infection for 19 study participants over 260 weeks. All bacteria ≥10 3 cfu/ml were isolated, identified, and subjected to select antimicrobial testing.

          Results

          From 234 urine samples, 1,092 bacteria were isolated and 286 (26%) were resistant to a tested antimicrobial. 226 urines were polymicrobial (97%), with an average of 4.7 isolates per weekly specimen. 233 urines (99%) exhibited >10 3 CFU/ml, 220 (94%) exhibited abnormal urinalysis, 77 (33%) were associated with at least one sign or symptom of infection, 51 (22%) met a standardized definition of CAUTI, and 3 (1%) had a corresponding caregiver diagnosis of CAUTI. Bacteriuria composition was remarkably stable, but catheter changes and antimicrobial treatment resulted in a net increase of 1.9 and 0.3 isolates per participant, respectively, and represented a source of new acquisition of antimicrobial resistant bacteria.

          Conclusions

          Catheterized individuals exhibit a high baseline prevalence of bacteriuria involving pathogenic bacteria and potential indicators of infection. Bacteriuria composition is largely polymicrobial and stable, and includes organisms previously considered to be urine culture contaminants. However, catheter changes and antimicrobial treatment may do more harm than good in this patient population. Funding: This work was supported by the NIH (R00 DK105205, R01 DK123158, UL1 TR001412)

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          (View ORCID Profile)
          Journal
          medRxiv
          September 29 2020
          Article
          10.1101/2020.09.29.20204107
          3455f5db-56ea-4f9c-a1bf-15901c95e032
          © 2020
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