Pathogens causing urinary tract infections in infants: a European overview by the ESCAPE study group
Date
2015Author
HARAMBAT, Jerome
Emre, Sevinc
JANKAUSKIENE, Augustina
FISCHBACH, Michel
Sever, Lale
Sallay, Peter
Simonetti, Giacomo D.
SZCZESNIAK, Przemyslaw
TEIXEIRA, Ana
VIDAL, Enrico
WUEHL, Elke
MEHLS, Otto
WEBER, Lutz T.
SCHAEFER, Franz
MONTINI, Giovanni
ALBERICI, Irene
Bayazit, Aysun Karabay
DROZDZ, Dorota
PECO-ANTIC, Amira
MORELLO, William
Mir, Sevgi
LITWIN, Mieczyslaw
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Knowledge of the distribution spectrum of causative organisms and their resistance patterns has become a core requirement for the rational and effective management of urinary tract infections. In the context of a prospective trial on the use of antibiotic prophylaxis in infants with underling kidney malformations, we conducted an online survey among paediatric nephrologists on positive urine cultures (July 2010-June 2012) from both hospitalized and non-hospitalized infants under 24 months of age. We collected 4745 urine cultures (UCs) at 18 units in 10 European countries. Escherichia coli was the most frequent bacterium isolated from UCs; however, in 10/16 hospitals and in 6/15 community settings, E. coli was isolated in less than 50 % of the total positive UCs. Other bacterial strains were Klebsiella, Enterococcus, Proteus and Pseudomonas not only from hospital settings. E. coli showed a high resistance to amoxicillin and trimethoprim and variable to cephalosporin. Nitrofurantoin had a good rate of efficacy, with 11/16 hospitals and 11/14 community settings reporting a resistance lower than 5 %.
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