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Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales

Resistance to oral antibiotics commonly used to treat outpatient urinary tract infections (UTIs) is increasing, but the implications of empirical treatment of resistant pathogens are not well described. Using an electronic records database, we reviewed the outcomes of patients >18 years of age wh...

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Autores principales: Dunne, Michael W., Puttagunta, Sailaja, Aronin, Steven I., Brossette, Stephen, Murray, John, Gupta, Vikas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8826825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35138150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02359-21
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author Dunne, Michael W.
Puttagunta, Sailaja
Aronin, Steven I.
Brossette, Stephen
Murray, John
Gupta, Vikas
author_facet Dunne, Michael W.
Puttagunta, Sailaja
Aronin, Steven I.
Brossette, Stephen
Murray, John
Gupta, Vikas
author_sort Dunne, Michael W.
collection PubMed
description Resistance to oral antibiotics commonly used to treat outpatient urinary tract infections (UTIs) is increasing, but the implications of empirical treatment of resistant pathogens are not well described. Using an electronic records database, we reviewed the outcomes of patients >18 years of age who developed an outpatient UTI and had an outpatient urine culture result showing a member of the order Enterobacterales along with prescription data for an oral antibiotic filled on the day before, day of, or day after the culture was collected. Linear probability models were used to estimate partial effects of select clinical and demographic variables on the composite outcome. In all, 4,792 patients had 5,587 oral antibiotic prescriptions. Of 5,395 evaluable episodes, 22% of patients received an antibiotic to which the pathogen was resistant in vitro, and those patients were almost twice as likely to require a second prescription (34% versus 19%) or be hospitalized (15% versus 8%) within 28 days of the initial prescription fill compared to patients who received an antibiotic to which the pathogen was susceptible. Approximately 1% of Enterobacterales isolates were resistant to all commonly available classes of oral antibiotics. A greater risk of treatment failure was seen in patients over 60 years of age, patients with diabetes mellitus, men, and those treated with an antibiotic when prior culture identified an organism resistant to that class. The increasing resistance among members of Enterobacterales responsible for outpatient UTIs is limiting the effectiveness of empirical treatment with existing antibiotics, and consequently, outpatients with UTI are more likely to require additional courses of therapy or be hospitalized. IMPORTANCE Resistance rates for bacteria that cause urinary tract infections (UTIs) have increased dramatically. Regional rates of resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics now exceed 20%, which is the threshold at which the Infectious Diseases Society of America recommends therapy be guided by culture. Our goals were to describe outcomes for outpatients with UTIs caused by bacteria resistant to empirically chosen antibiotics and to create a simple stratification schema for clinicians to identify UTI patients at increased risk of treatment failure due to antibiotic mismatch. These data are relevant to clinicians, given how common uncomplicated UTIs are, and highlight the need for clinicians to understand local resistance rates and the importance of culture-guided treatment, especially in vulnerable patients. These findings also showed that 1% of bacteria were resistant to all major classes of oral antibiotics, underscoring the need for new antibiotics to treat patients with UTIs due to resistant bacteria.
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spelling pubmed-88268252022-02-17 Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales Dunne, Michael W. Puttagunta, Sailaja Aronin, Steven I. Brossette, Stephen Murray, John Gupta, Vikas Microbiol Spectr Research Article Resistance to oral antibiotics commonly used to treat outpatient urinary tract infections (UTIs) is increasing, but the implications of empirical treatment of resistant pathogens are not well described. Using an electronic records database, we reviewed the outcomes of patients >18 years of age who developed an outpatient UTI and had an outpatient urine culture result showing a member of the order Enterobacterales along with prescription data for an oral antibiotic filled on the day before, day of, or day after the culture was collected. Linear probability models were used to estimate partial effects of select clinical and demographic variables on the composite outcome. In all, 4,792 patients had 5,587 oral antibiotic prescriptions. Of 5,395 evaluable episodes, 22% of patients received an antibiotic to which the pathogen was resistant in vitro, and those patients were almost twice as likely to require a second prescription (34% versus 19%) or be hospitalized (15% versus 8%) within 28 days of the initial prescription fill compared to patients who received an antibiotic to which the pathogen was susceptible. Approximately 1% of Enterobacterales isolates were resistant to all commonly available classes of oral antibiotics. A greater risk of treatment failure was seen in patients over 60 years of age, patients with diabetes mellitus, men, and those treated with an antibiotic when prior culture identified an organism resistant to that class. The increasing resistance among members of Enterobacterales responsible for outpatient UTIs is limiting the effectiveness of empirical treatment with existing antibiotics, and consequently, outpatients with UTI are more likely to require additional courses of therapy or be hospitalized. IMPORTANCE Resistance rates for bacteria that cause urinary tract infections (UTIs) have increased dramatically. Regional rates of resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics now exceed 20%, which is the threshold at which the Infectious Diseases Society of America recommends therapy be guided by culture. Our goals were to describe outcomes for outpatients with UTIs caused by bacteria resistant to empirically chosen antibiotics and to create a simple stratification schema for clinicians to identify UTI patients at increased risk of treatment failure due to antibiotic mismatch. These data are relevant to clinicians, given how common uncomplicated UTIs are, and highlight the need for clinicians to understand local resistance rates and the importance of culture-guided treatment, especially in vulnerable patients. These findings also showed that 1% of bacteria were resistant to all major classes of oral antibiotics, underscoring the need for new antibiotics to treat patients with UTIs due to resistant bacteria. American Society for Microbiology 2022-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8826825/ /pubmed/35138150 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02359-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Dunne et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Dunne, Michael W.
Puttagunta, Sailaja
Aronin, Steven I.
Brossette, Stephen
Murray, John
Gupta, Vikas
Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales
title Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales
title_full Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales
title_fullStr Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales
title_short Impact of Empirical Antibiotic Therapy on Outcomes of Outpatient Urinary Tract Infection Due to Nonsusceptible Enterobacterales
title_sort impact of empirical antibiotic therapy on outcomes of outpatient urinary tract infection due to nonsusceptible enterobacterales
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8826825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35138150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02359-21
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