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Pediatric Urinary Tract Infections

Pediatric Urinary Tract Infections. Dr.Fahad Gadi, MD Pediatrics Demonstrator King Abdulaziz University Rabigh Medical School. Objectives. Define Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) List antibiotic treatment options for UTI List the workup after a first febrile UTI

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Pediatric Urinary Tract Infections

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  1. Pediatric Urinary Tract Infections Dr.Fahad Gadi, MD Pediatrics Demonstrator King Abdulaziz University Rabigh Medical School

  2. Objectives Define Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) List antibiotic treatment options for UTI List the workup after a first febrile UTI Be familiar with the rationale for using prophylactic antibiotics after the first febrile UTI

  3. Pediatric UTIs and EBM • Up to 7% of girls and 2% of boys experience a symptomatic culture-proven UTI prior to 6 years of age. • Of febrile neonates, up to 7% have UTIs. • (See Fever without a source guidelines) • Most UTIs in children are from ascending bacteria • E. coli (60-80%), Proteus, Klebsiella, Enterococcus, and coag. neg. staph.

  4. Epidemiology The overall prevalence of UTI is approximately 5 percent in febrile infants but varies widely by race and sex. Caucasian children had a two- to fourfold higher prevalence of UTI as compared to African-American children Females have a two- to fourfold higher prevalence of UTI than do circumcised males Caucasian females with a temperature of 39 ºC have a UTI prevalence of 16 percent

  5. Approximate probability of urinary tract infection in febrile infants and young children by demographic group

  6. Definition of UTI on culture

  7. Symptoms • Classic UTI symptoms in older children • Dysuria, frequency, urgency, small-volume voids, lower abdominal pain. • Infants with UTIs have nonspecific symptoms • Fever, irritability, vomiting, poor appetite

  8. Neonatal hematuria? Nope, it’s uric acid crystals

  9. Evaluation In children with a high likelihood of UTI, a urine culture is required. In children with a low likelihood, a negative dipstick in a clear urine reduces the need for culture. If the dipstick shows (+) LE and/or (+) Nitrites, send a urine culture. The dipstick is not sufficient to diagnose UTI’s because false positives can occur.

  10. Urine dipsticks In a cohort study with an 18% baseline prevalence of UTI, negative LE and nitrates on dipstick had a negative predictive value of 96%. NPV = True negative _________________ True negative + false negative

  11. Leukocyte Esterase and Nitrites • LE is produced from the breakdown of leukocytes. Not always indicative of infection • Vaginitis/vulvitis can lead to inflammation without infection  + LE • Nitrites are produced by bacteria that metabolize nitrates: E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus (GNRs) • Much more predictive of UTI • GPCs do not produce nitrites

  12. Blood cultures Blood cultures are generally unnecessary in most children with UTI. They are more frequently positive in children younger than two months whose urine grows Group B strep or Staph. Aureus. In general, we’ll send febrile children less than two months old to the ER for emergent evaluation/labs.

  13. Treatment of UTIs The efficacy of oral regimens is as effective as parenteral regimens - this is great news for outpatient therapy  If the child is not responding the empiric treatment within two days while awaiting culture results, repeat the urine culture and perform a renal ultrasound.

  14. Antibiotic Choices • Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxizole is a good choice after two months of life • Other choices: • Amoxicillin – some resistance with E. coli • Cephalosporins: cefixime (Suprax), cefpodoxime (Vantin), cefprozil (Cefzil), loracarbef (Lorabid) • No cephalosporins cover enterococcus • Treat for 7-14 days. One day course not effective.

  15. Further testing/work-up After the UTI resolves, what type of workup should ensue?

  16. Vesicoureteral Reflux and Treatment Approximately 40% of children with febrile UTIs have VUR. Approximately 8% of children with febrile UTIs demonstrate renal scarring when studied. Treatment recommendations are made to stop the progression of VUR with medications/antibiotics and/or surgery. No data/EBM demonstrate that treatment of VUR prevents renal scarring, hypertension and CKD

  17. Antibiotic prophylaxis • Children with VUR are treated prophylactically with antibiotics to prevent potential renal scarring. • Nitrofurantoin or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxizole • Half the standard dose administered at bedtime • Family physicians would generally have a pediatric urologist involved to assist in making treatment decisions.

  18. How long to continue Abx? Although the evidence is not conclusive, it appears the risk of scarring diminishes with age. Accordingly, some experts recommend cessation of prophylaxis after age 5 to 7 years, even if low-grade VUR persists. In one study of 51 low-risk (no voiding abnormalities or renal scarring) older children (mean age 8.6 years) with grades I to IV VUR, cessation of prophylactic antibiotics resulted in no new renal scarring on annual DMSA

  19. Indications to order radiologic studies Children younger than 5 years of age with a febrile UTI Girls younger than 3 years of age with a first UTI Males of any age with a first UTI (PUV) Children with recurrent UTI Children with UTI who do not respond promptly to therapy

  20. Studies to consider • Renal Ultrasound • Will evaluate for perinephric abscess in patients not responding to antibiotics. • Can evaluate for hydronephrosis/hydroureter • Of note, dilation of the kidneys and ureters can easily be seen on routine anatomy scans during pregnancy. • Picking up vesicoureteral reflux while asymptomatic • Does this help or hurt? Staging of VUR, antibiotics, etc...

  21. Hydronephrosis

  22. Male with the findings below.Cause?

  23. Studies to consider • Voiding cystourethrogram – two techniques • One involves fluoroscopic contrast – more radiation but better delineation of anatomy for grading VUR • The other uses a radionuclide – less radiation and more sensitive than contrast

  24. Normal VCUG

  25. Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR)

  26. Megaureter

  27. Studies to consider • Renal scintigraphy using dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) • Can detect scarring in the kidneys. • Renal cells take up the tracer. • Those cells damaged by pyelonephritis or scarring do not take up the tracer. • Management or followup of patients does not change in most cases. • Thus, not generally used for initial evaluation.

  28. Scar in the superior and inferior pole of the right kidney

  29. Myths Bathing in bubble baths causes UTIs Wiping back-to-front causes UTIs Cranberry juice helps UTIs – only proven to be of minimal benefit in adult women. No proven benefit to children

  30. VUR Treatment Children 6 years or older with unilateral grade III to IV reflux without renal scarring can be treated medically. If the reflux is bilateral and/or there is renal scarring, surgical treatment is recommended. Children 6 years or older with grade V reflux should be treated surgically with or without evidence of renal scarring, as their reflux is unlikely to resolve spontaneously. Surgery also should be considered if medical therapy fails either because of poor compliance, breakthrough infections on account of antibiotic resistance, or significant antibiotic side effects. Finally, consideration of patient and parent preference is important in the final decision.

  31. Objectives • Define Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) • >100,000 CFU in clean catch girls • >10,000 CFU clean catch guys • >10,000 catheter specimen • List antibiotic treatment options for UTI • Amoxicillin, Bactrim, Cephalosporins • List the workup after a first febrile UTI • Consider renal U/S and VCUG • Be familiar with the rationale for using prophylactic antibiotics after the first febrile UTI • Prevent renal complications/scarring/pyelonephritis

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