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Article: Presumed Urinary Tract Infection in Patients Admitted with COVID-19: Are We Treating Too Much?

Van Laethem, Johan / Wuyts, Stephanie C M / Pierreux, Jan / Seyler, Lucie / Verschelden, Gil / Depondt, Thibault / Meuwissen, Annelies / Lacor, Patrick / Piérard, Denis / Allard, Sabine D

Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland)

2021  Volume 10, Issue 12

Abstract: Despite the low rates of bacterial co-/superinfections in COVID-19 patients, antimicrobial drug use has been liberal since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Due to the low specificity of markers of bacterial co-/superinfection in the COVID-19 setting, ... ...

Abstract Despite the low rates of bacterial co-/superinfections in COVID-19 patients, antimicrobial drug use has been liberal since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Due to the low specificity of markers of bacterial co-/superinfection in the COVID-19 setting, overdiagnosis and antimicrobial overprescription have become widespread. A quantitative and qualitative evaluation of urinary tract infection (UTI) diagnoses and antimicrobial drug prescriptions for UTI diagnoses was performed in patients admitted to the COVID-19 ward of a university hospital between 17 March and 2 November 2020. A team of infectious disease specialists performed an appropriateness evaluation for every diagnosis of UTI and every antimicrobial drug prescription covering a UTI. A driver analysis was performed to identify factors increasing the odds of UTI (over)diagnosis. A total of 622 patients were included. UTI was present in 13% of included admissions, and in 12%, antimicrobials were initiated for a UTI diagnosis (0.71 daily defined doses (DDDs)/admission; 22% were scored as 'appropriate'). An evaluation of UTI diagnoses by ID specialists revealed that of the 79 UTI diagnoses, 61% were classified as probable overdiagnosis related to the COVID-19 hospitalization. The following factors were associated with UTI overdiagnosis: physicians who are unfamiliar working in an internal medicine ward, urinary incontinence, mechanical ventilation and female sex. Antimicrobial stewardship teams should focus on diagnostic stewardship of UTIs, as UTI overdiagnosis seems to be highly prevalent in admitted COVID-19 patients.
Language English
Publishing date 2021-12-06
Publishing country Switzerland
Document type Journal Article
ZDB-ID 2681345-2
ISSN 2079-6382
ISSN 2079-6382
DOI 10.3390/antibiotics10121493
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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