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Impact of Treating Asymptomatic Bacteriuria in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Prospective Cohort Study

Authors

Fontsere, Sara , Infante-Dominguez, Carmen , Suarez-Benjumea, Alejandro , Suner-Poblet, Marta , Gonzalez-Corvillo, Carmen , MARTÍN GUTIÉRREZ, GUILLERMO, Bernal, Gabriel , Pachon, Jeronimo , Pachon-Ibanez, Maria Eugenia , Cordero, Elisa

External publication

No

Means

Antibiotics (Basel)

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

5.222

SJR Impact

0.785

Publication date

01/02/2021

ISI

000622065500001

Abstract

This study aims to define the epidemiologic, clinical, and microbiological features of asymptomatic bacteriuria (AB) and cystitis in kidney transplantation recipients (KTRs), and to determine the impact of antimicrobial therapy of AB and the risk factors of cystitis. We conducted a prospective observational study of AB and cystitis in KTRs from January to June 2017. One-hundred ninety seven KTRs were included: 175 (88.8%) with AB and 22 (11.2%) with cystitis. The most frequent etiologies were Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterococcus faecalis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. No differences were observed regarding the etiologies, antimicrobial susceptibility patterns, and microbiologic outcomes in AB vs. cystitis. The treatment of AB diminished the microbiological cure and increased the rates of microbiologic relapses and reinfections; in addition, treated AB patients showed a trend of developing symptomatic urinary tract infection in the following six months. The analysis of the data identified the following independent risk factors for cystitis during the six months of follow-up: AB treatment, thymoglobulin induction, previous acute pyelonephritis, and time since transplantation < 1 year. In summary, considering the lack of clinical benefits of treating AB and its impact on cystitis development in the follow-up, we support the recommendation of not screening for or treating AB.

Keywords

urinary tract infections; kidney recipients; asymptomatic bacteriuria; cystitis; prospective observational cohort

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