2020
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240981
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A diagnostic algorithm for detection of urinary tract infections in hospitalized patients with bacteriuria: The “Triple F” approach supported by Procalcitonin and paired blood and urine cultures

Abstract: For acute medicine physicians, distinguishing between asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU) and clinically relevant urinary tract infections (UTI) is challenging, resulting in overtreatment of ABU and under-recognition of urinary-source bacteraemia without genitourinary symptoms (USB). We conducted a retrospective analysis of ED encounters in a university hospital between October 2013 and September 2018 who met the following inclusion criteria: Suspected UTI with simultaneous collection of paired urinary cultures and… Show more

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“…Another retrospective study by Rothe et al examined cases of 183 hospitalized patients with systemic urinary infection and bacteriuria, using a more lenient threshold of ≥10 3 CFUs/mL in both catheterized and non-catheterized patients, and excluded patients with negative urine cultures. 35 Rothe et al examined the diagnostic accuracy of PCT to detect true bacteremia and found a negative predictive value of 89% using a PCT cutpoint of <0.25 ng/mL. However, 26% of cases in this analysis included bacterial infections not referrable to the genitourinary tract (pneumonia, n =30; venous access infection, n =9; skin and soft tissue infection, n =9).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Another retrospective study by Rothe et al examined cases of 183 hospitalized patients with systemic urinary infection and bacteriuria, using a more lenient threshold of ≥10 3 CFUs/mL in both catheterized and non-catheterized patients, and excluded patients with negative urine cultures. 35 Rothe et al examined the diagnostic accuracy of PCT to detect true bacteremia and found a negative predictive value of 89% using a PCT cutpoint of <0.25 ng/mL. However, 26% of cases in this analysis included bacterial infections not referrable to the genitourinary tract (pneumonia, n =30; venous access infection, n =9; skin and soft tissue infection, n =9).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%