Title of article :
Bacteriuria and antibiotic resistance in catheter urine specimens following radical prostatectomy
Author/Authors :
Banks، نويسنده , , Jessica A. and McGuire، نويسنده , , Barry B. and Loeb، نويسنده , , Stacy and Shrestha، نويسنده , , Sanjina and Helfand، نويسنده , , Brian T. and Catalona، نويسنده , , William J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Objective
are increasing reports of infectious complications following prostate biopsy due to fluoroquinolone resistance. To determine infectious complications at catheter removal following radical prostatectomy (RP), another setting in daily urological practice where fluoroquinolone prophylaxis is frequently used.
als and methods
spectively examined urine culture results collected from 334 RP patients immediately prior to catheter removal. Patients received prophylactic antibiotics 1 day before, the day of, and for 5 days after catheter removal. Culture results were reviewed for bacterial species and antimicrobial susceptibilities. Patients with positive urine cultures resistant to the prophylactic antibiotic were switched to culture-specific antibiotic therapy and underwent follow-up culture. The frequency of urinary tract infection (UTI), complications, additional antibiotic therapy, and repeat urine cultures was determined within 60 days.
s
334 patients identified, 203 (61%) had cultures with no bacterial growth, and 48 (14%) had colony counts of <1,000 bacteria or Candida albicans and received no further antibiotics. The remaining 83 (25%) had positive culture results, of which 7% were resistant to ciprofloxacin. Twenty-four bacterial species were identified, with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (5%) Escherichia coli (4%), and Staphylococcus epidermidis (3%) being the most frequent. Only two (0.6%) men developed clinical symptoms consistent with UTI (i.e., suprapubic pain, fever) prior to catheter removal, and no serious complications occurred.
sions
tantial proportion of RP patients have positive urine cultures at the time of catheter removal, despite the administration of prophylactic fluoroquinolone antibiotics. Potentially virulent organisms are commonly cultured, and ciprofloxacin resistance is frequent. However, outcomes are favorable when culture-specific oral antibiotic therapy is initiated.
Keywords :
Radical Prostatectomy , Urinary tract infection , Urine cultures , Catheter , prostate cancer
Journal title :
Urologic Oncology
Journal title :
Urologic Oncology