Prior antibiotics and risk of antibiotic-resistant community-acquired urinary tract infection: a case–control study

Sharon L. Hillier, Zoë Roberts(Cardiff University), Frank Dunstan(Cardiff University), Christopher Butler(Cardiff University), Anthony Howard(Public Health Wales), Stephen Palmer(Cardiff University)
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
May 30, 2007
Cited by 181Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To assess the effect of previous antibiotic use on the risk of a resistant Escherichia coli urinary tract infection (UTI), we undertook a case-control study with prospective measurement of outcomes in 10 general practices in the UK. METHODS: Urinary samples from all patients with symptoms suggestive of UTIs were sought, and those with a laboratory-proven E. coli infection were interviewed and their medical records examined. Case patients were those with ampicillin- or trimethoprim-resistant infections and control patients had infections that were susceptible to antibiotics, including ampicillin and trimethoprim. RESULTS: Risk of ampicillin-resistant E. coli infection in 903 patients was associated with amoxicillin prescriptions of >or=7 days duration in the previous 1 month [odds ratio (OR)=3.91, 95% CI 1.64-9.34] and previous 2-3 months (2.29, 1.12-4.70) before illness onset. For prescriptions <7 days duration, there was no statistically significant association. Higher doses of amoxicillin were associated with lower risk of ampicillin resistance. For trimethoprim-resistant E. coli infections, the OR was 8.44 (3.12-22.86) for prescriptions of trimethoprim of >or=7 days in the previous month and 13.91 (3.32-58.31) for the previous 2-3 months. For trimethoprim prescriptions of <7 days, the OR was 4.03 (1.69-9.59) for the previous month but prescribing in earlier periods was not significantly associated with resistance. CONCLUSIONS: Within the community setting, exposure to antibiotics is a strong risk factor for a resistant E. coli UTI. High-dose, shorter-duration antibiotic regimens may reduce the pressure on the emergence of antibiotic resistance.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis