Urine culture practices for complicated urinary tract infections in an academic emergency department

Bennett D. Sorensen, Joshua R. Lupton, Laura E. Chess, Michael J. Hildebrand, Mohamud R. Daya

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: Complicated UTIs (cUTIs) are defined by a heterogenous group of risk factors that place the patient at increased risk of treatment failure in whom urine cultures are recommended. We evaluated the ordering practices for urine cultures for cUTI patients and patient outcomes in an academic hospital setting. Methods: Retrospective chart review of adults of 18 years and older with cUTIs diagnosed in a single academic emergency department (ED). We reviewed 398 patient encounters based on a range of ICD-10 diagnosis codes consistent with cUTI between 1/1/2019 and 6/30/2019. The definition of cUTI consisted of thirteen subgroups composited from existing literature and guidelines. The primary outcome was ordering a urine culture for cUTI. We also assessed impact of the urine culture results and compared clinical course severity and readmission rates between cultured and not cultured patients. Results: During this period, the ED had 398 potential cUTI visits based on ICD-10 code, of which 330 (82.9%) met the study inclusion criteria for cUTI. Of these cUTI encounters, clinicians failed to obtain urine cultures in 92 (29.8%). Of the 217 cUTI with cultures, 121 (55.8%) demonstrated sensitivity to original treatment, 10 (4.6%) demonstrated the need to change antimicrobial coverage, 49 (22.6%) demonstrated the presence of contamination, and 29 (13.4%) demonstrated insignificant growth. Patients with cUTI who received cultures experienced higher rates of admission to both ED observation (33.2% vs 16.3%, p = 0.003) and the hospital (41.9% vs 23.8%, p = 0.003) compared to those with missed cultures. Admitted cUTI patients experienced greater length of hospital stay when cultures were obtained (3.23 vs 1.53 days, p < 0.001). Readmission rates for patients with cUTI discharged from the ED within 30 days were 4.0% for patients with urine cultures and 7.3% for patients without urine cultures (p = 0.155). Conclusion: Over a quarter of cUTI patients in this study did not receive a urine culture. Further studies are needed to assess if improving adherence to urine culturing practices for cUTIs will impact clinical outcomes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)170-174
Number of pages5
JournalAmerican Journal of Emergency Medicine
Volume68
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • Complicated
  • Emergency department
  • Urinary tract infections
  • Urine culture

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Emergency Medicine

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