There are more than 7 million uncomplicated urinary

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Diagnostic & Therapeutic Corner Urinary Tract Infections in Patients with Chronic Renal Insufficiency David N. Gilbert Department of Medical Education, Providence Portland Medical Center, and Department of Medicine, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon Despite an increasing population of patients with chronic renal insufficiency, the literature on the management of urinary tract infections (UTI) in these patients is sparse. Patients with underlying diabetes are a specific population at risk. Antimicrobial treatment of UTI requires adequate serum, renal, parenchymal, and urine concentrations of drugs with antibacterial activity versus the etiologic organism. Sulfamethoxazole and nitrofurantoin are examples of drugs with low and likely inadequate urine concentrations in patients with creatinine clearances of <50 ml/min. Urine concentrations of ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin remain sufficient as renal function fails, whereas the concentrations of gemifloxacin and moxifloxacin are too low to predict efficacy. More investigative work is needed in the management of UTI in patients with poor renal function. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 1: 327 331, 2006. doi: 10.2215/CJN.01931105 There are more than 7 million uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTI) per year in the United States (1). The total includes more than 250,000 episodes of acute pyelonephritis per year. The incidence in patients with chronic renal insufficiency is unclear. The management of UTI in patients with chronic renal insufficiency has attracted little to no attention. An in-depth electronic literature review identified only one publication that addressed the subject (2). There are a few studies of the treatment of infected polycystic kidneys (3,4). This is despite large numbers of patients with GFR between 10 and 50 ml/min as a result of diabetes, hypertension, and other disease entities. UTI in these patients seems not to be a problem that is sufficient to generate academic interest. This article highlights and comments on the issues that are involved in the management of UTI in patients with chronic renal insufficiency. The Issues Epidemiology After adjustment for age, the frequency of UTI in patients with chronic renal insufficiency is not known to be different from that in the general population. On the one hand, the chronic disease that causes the renal insufficiency could reduce the risk for UTI as a result of reduction of risk factors such as sexual activity. Alternatively, the risk might be increased by disease factors (e.g., papillary necrosis, nephrolithiasis, neurogenic bladder) and the management of comorbidities with Published online ahead of print. Publication date available at www.cjasn.org. Address correspondence to: Dr. David N. Gilbert, Department of Medical Education, Providence Portland Medical Center, 5050 NE Hoyt, Suite 540, Portland, OR 97213. Phone: 503-215-6260; Fax: 503-215-6857; E-mail: david.gilbert@ providence.org Foley catheters and intravenous lines. No literature that addressed this question was found. There is documentation of increased risk for UTI in female patients with diabetes (5 8). Asymptomatic bacteriuria in women with diabetes is roughly three-fold greater than in women without diabetes, regardless of the degree of control of the hyperglycemia (9). Women with diabetes are more prone to severe cystitis, ascending pyelonephritis, and severe forms of pyelonephritis (e.g., perinephric abscess, papillary necrosis) (9). Despite the frequency of renal impairment as a result of diabetes, suggested treatment in such patients has not been a focus of published literature. Types of UTI and Treatment Implications The comments that follow focus on urethritis, cystitis, and pyelonephritis. The management of asymptomatic bacteriuria, chronic Foley catheter related bacteriuria, and prostatitis is not discussed. A long-standing issue is whether UTI represent surface mucosal (uroepithelial) or parenchymal infections or both. Infections of the urethra are viewed as superficial, whereas pyelonephritis is considered a parenchymal infection. Cystitis ranges from mild (superficial) to invasion of the wall of the bladder. So, which is more important: Adequate urine or serum concentrations of antimicrobial agents? Data from UTI in animal models are helpful. High urine drug concentrations are necessary to sterilize urine; for pyelonephritis, it is necessary to have effective tissue concentrations of the antimicrobial agent. The serum concentrations of anti-infectives correlate with the drug concentration in renal tissue (10). Glomerular filtration net tubular secretion determines urine concentration. Thus, for patients who have renal insufficiency with therapeutic serum drug levels and adequate arterial perfusion of the renal parenchyma, the delivery of therapeutic Copyright 2006 by the American Society of Nephrology ISSN: 1555-9041/102-0327

328 Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 1: 327 331, 2006 drug concentrations to both the parenchyma and the urine should not be a problem. For patients with chronic insufficiency and cystitis, there is a possibility that the urine drug concentration may be too low to eradicate the etiologic organism. Management Pyelonephritis General principles apply regardless of the GFR. Blood cultures and an uncontaminated urine specimen are collected and submitted for culture and sensitivity. Obstruction of the urine collecting system by stone, tumor, stricture, necrotic renal papillae, or other pathology is considered and excluded. The selection of the drug for empiric therapy is based on efficacy versus the likely infecting organism plus the patient s allergy history, drug toxicity profile, drug excretory pathway, drug cost, and other factors. Escherichia coli remains the most common pathogen for both outpatients and hospitalized patients (11,12). Enterococci and other aerobic Gram-negative bacilli (e.g., Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Proteus species) constitute the bulk of the non E. coli infections. The increasing resistance of E. coli and Klebsiella species to penicillins and cephalosporins as a result of the production of extended-spectrum -lactamases is noteworthy (13). Pseudomonas aeruginosa is usually encountered in patients with chronic indwelling Foley catheters or patients with complicated UTI. Activity versus Staphylococcus saprophyticus is important for patients with cystitis/urethritis. The Gram stain of the well-mixed but uncentrifuged urine can be helpful. Detection of one or more bacteria per highpower field correlates with a bacterial density of 100,000 bacteria/ml urine (14). Furthermore, it is often possible to distinguish between Gram-positive cocci (e.g. enterococci), large Gram-negative bacilli (e.g., E. coli), small Gram-negative bacilli (e.g., P. aeruginosa), and yeast. At present, the recommended empiric therapy is a fluoroquinolone that achieves both adequate serum and urine concentrations. Hence, moxifloxacin or gemifloxacin should not be used because of their low urine concentrations (Table 1). The dose of drug is adjusted for the degree of renal insufficiency as suggested by the drug package insert or standard reference sources (15,16). The primary goal is to achieve predictably effective serum and urine concentrations. Ciprofloxacin urine concentrations, 24 h after an adjusted dose, are reported as above the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of urinary pathogens in patients with a creatinine clearance of 50 ml/min (17,18). Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is often administered for uncomplicated pyelonephritis in young women. However, for reasons described below, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole may not be effective in patients with renal insufficiency. The fluoroquinolones do not have predictable efficacy versus enterococci. If enterococcal infection is suspected on the basis of the urine Gram stain, positive blood culture, or other factors, then empiric therapy with piperacillin-tazobactam, ticarcillinclavulanate, or ampicillin-sulbactam is suggested. For severely penicillin-allergic patients, vancomycin is reasonable. Daptomycin, although not licensed to treat UTI, does achieve high urine concentrations. In the bacteremic patient with septic shock, an empiric carbapenem (imipenem or meropenem) is reasonable because of the high level of predictive efficacy versus E. coli, other Enterobacteriaceae, many enterococci, and P. aeruginosa. Ertapenem is another option with the caveat that ertapenem does not have predictive activity versus P. aeruginosa or Enterococcus species (18). Patients with polycystic renal disease and infected cysts are a special population. Published reports indicate that effective concentrations of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, ciprofloxacin, and chloramphenicol can be achieved in the cyst fluid (3,4). In contrast, penicillins, cephalosporins, and aminoglycosides do not achieve adequate cyst concentrations (19). Specific management depends on the culture and sensitivity results plus the ability to resolve underlying or associated comorbid states. For uncomplicated pyelonephritis in young women, 7 d of therapy with an effective fluoroquinolone is as effective as 14 d of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (20). The appropriate duration of fluoroquinolone therapy in patients with renal insufficiency is unknown. There are no duration studies with -lactams; the penicillins, cephalosporins, and carbapenems are generally given for 14 d, especially when accompanied by bacteremia. In short, the management of pyelonephritis in patients with GFR in the 10- to 50-ml/min range requires only reduction of dosage to avoid high serum concentrations and the concomitant increased risk for concentration-dependent adverse drug events. Ciprofloxacin or levofloxacin are suggested as first choices for empiric therapy. Cystitis/Urethritis With the import of adequate urine drug concentration as a significant factor in success in treating urethritis and cystitis, I contacted several pharmaceutical manufacturers with drugs that are licensed as safe and effective for the treatment of UTI. The companies indicated that their UTI-controlled studies excluded patients with impaired renal function. None of the respondents had data on urine drug concentrations in patients with renal insufficiency; none of the companies had data on clinical or bacteriologic response rates stratified by the degree of renal insufficiency. There are published data on the urine concentrations of antimicrobials in patients with normal renal function (Table 1) (21 23). With normal renal function, filtered drug is concentrated many-fold such that urine concentrations can reach many thousands of micrograms per milliliter. The MIC for 90% of the bacteria that commonly cause UTI is usually 16 g/ml. Hence, there is a large safety range as long as the kidney can concentrate urine to some degree. Even though it is unlikely that cystitis would require parenteral therapy, it is pertinent to comment on the data in Table 1. Urine drug concentrations can be hard to interpret. Urine is collected over variable time periods, and the concentration measured reflects an average for the time involved (23). Renal excretion is also measured as the percentage of unchanged drug excreted over 24 to 48 h rather than as an average concentration. In addition to drug concentration, urinary ph and

Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 1: 327 331, 2006 UTI and Renal Insufficiency 329 Table 1. Serum and urine concentrations of selected antimicrobials a Drug Dose, Route Excretion via Peak Serum Concentration ( g/ml) % Renal Excretion of Unchanged Drug Urine Concentration ( g/ml) -Lactams ampicillin 0.5 g p.o. GF, TS 3 to 6 75 to 92 1000 to 2250 amoxicillin 0.5 g p.o. GF, TS 6 to 10 60 to 98 300 to 1300 aztreonam 1 g IV GF, TS 125 65 to 94 1000 to 5000 piperacillin 3 g IV GF, TS 209 74 to 89 8000 ticarcillin 3 g IV GF, TS 257 80 to 99 650 to 2500 cephalexin 1 g p.o. GF, TS 32 91 to 100 5000 to 10,000 cefuroxime 1 g p.o. GF, TS 14 50 1000 to 7000 cefixime 0.2 g p.o. 1 to 4 20 to 50 cefdinir 0.3 g p.o. 1.6 18 21 to 139 cefpodoxime 0.2 g p.o. 2.3 29 to 33 20 cefazolin 1 g IV GF, TS 188 90 to 96 700 to 2000 ceftriaxone 1 g IV GF 130 65 to 95 549 to 995 imipenem 0.5 g IV GF, TS 21 to 58 5 to 42 500 meropenem 1 g IV GF, TS 50 62 to 83 N/D ertapenem 1 g IV 154 38 N/D Fluoroquinolones ciprofloxacin 0.5 g p.o. GF, TS 1.6 to 2.9 30 to 50 350 gatifloxacin 0.4 g p.o. 4.2 65 N/D gemifloxacin 0.320 g p.o. 0.7 to 2.6 35 N/D levofloxacin 0.5 g p.o. GF 5.7 61 to 86 286 moxifloxacin 0.4 g p.o. 4.5 20 N/D Miscellaneous nitrofurantoin 0.1 gm p.o. GF, TS, TR 2 27to56 50to200 trimethoprim 0.16/0.8 g p.o. 9/105 50 to 75/10 to 30 31 to 165/10 to 133 sulfamethoxazole trimethoprim 0.2 gm p.o. GF, TS 2 50 to 75 70 to 100 sulfamethoxazole 0.8 g p.o. GF, TS, TR 46 N/D 400 to 2000 Aminoglycosides amikacin 0.5 g IV GF, TR 17 to 25 90 170 to 1720 gentamicin 0.08 g IV GF, TR 4 to 8 90 400 to 500 tobramycin 0.08 g IV GF, TR 4 to 8 90 94 to 443 a The urine concentration is expressed as the range of concentrations achieved after a standard dose in patients with normal renal function. Single values represent the average urine concentration over a standard dosage interval (21 23). GF, glomerular filtration; IV, intravenously; N/D, no data; p.o., orally; TR, tubular reabsorption; TS, tubular secretion. osmolality can affect antibacterial efficacy in urine, especially of aminoglycosides (24). All of the penicillins listed in Table 1 achieve high urine concentrations, and it is unlikely that subtherapeutic levels would occur in patients with renal insufficiency. Recall that reports indicate an inferior performance of amoxicillin-clavulanate as compared with ciprofloxacin in the treatment of uncomplicated cystitis in women (25). Although active in vitro versus E. coli, none of the four oral cephalosporins listed has Food and Drug Administration approval for UTI. Note that percentage of renal excretion for all four is 50%. Cefazolin and ceftriaxone achieve very high urine concentrations; hence, subtherapeutic concentrations with renal insufficiency is unlikely. Imipenem and ertapenem are approved for the treatment of UTI, whereas meropenem is not. Imipenem requires the presence of cilastatin to maintain therapeutic drug concentrations. For both imipenem and ertapenem, no more than 40% of a dose is present in the urine of patients with normal renal function. Even though the drugs MIC may be low, in patients with renal insufficiency, the urine concentrations may not be adequate and should be studied. Among the fluoroquinolones, attention is focused on gemifloxacin and moxifloxacin. Both have low urine concentrations and are not indicated in the treatment of UTI in patients with normal or abnormal renal function. In contrast, ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin achieve high urine concentrations with oral or parenteral therapy. Of interest, there is documentation of the posttreatment isolation of a fluoroquinolone-resistant E. coli from the feces of a patient who was treated for cystitis (26). In

330 Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 1: 327 331, 2006 the past, an advantage of fluoroquinolones was their ability to eradicate infecting E. coli from vaginal, perineal, and presumably rectal sites of colonization. Nitrofurantoin provides proof of principle. Patients with creatinine clearances 20 ml/min excrete little or no drug in the urine, suggesting that nitrofurantoin not be used in such patients (27,28). There are two concerns regarding the use of trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole. There is increasing documentation of resistance of E. coli. Surveillance surveys in the United States indicate in vitro resistance in the range of 15 to 17%; the rate in Portugal is nearly 35% (29). Second, the urine concentrations of sulfamethoxazole falls to subtherapeutic concentrations in patients with creatinine clearances 50 ml/min (30). Of interest, the urine trimethoprim concentration remains high even with marked renal insufficiency (30). Why this difference exists is unclear. Hence, the suggestion is to prescribe trimethoprim alone, in reduced dosage, for the treatment of uncomplicated cystitis in patients with a low creatinine clearance. Aminoglycosides The aminoglycosides are excreted by glomerular filtration. Roughly 5% of filtered drug is reabsorbed by the cells of the proximal renal tubules (31). The result is very high urine concentrations (Table 1). There are few data on urine concentrations in patients with renal disease. One paper reported a peak urine concentration of sisomicin (an aminoglycoside that is not available in the United States) of only 1.8 g/ml in the ureteral urine from a severely damaged kidney (32). Aminoglycosides are not indicated for the treatment of cystitis or urethritis. At present, E. coli, Klebsiella species, and other common Gram-negative causes of pyelonephritis are susceptible to fluoroquinolones and extended-spectrum -lactam antibiotics, making unnecessary the use of potentially toxic aminoglycosides. Rarely, it might be necessary to use aminoglycosides in low synergistic doses in combination with an active penicillin for enterococcal pyelonephritis. Pyelonephritis that is caused by P. aeruginosa may require an aminoglycoside in the rare instance of resistance to both ciprofloxacin and anti-pseudomonal -lactams. Adjustment of dosage should yield effective serum and renal parenchymal levels and adequate urine concentrations, lower the risk for further drug-induced renal injury, and minimize the chance of ototoxicity. In summary, antimicrobials with anticipated effectiveness in patients with urethritis/cystitis and chronic renal insufficiency are selected fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) and trimethoprim alone. Nitrofurantoin should not be used because of low urine drug concentrations. Conclusion Clinical trials of new drugs that are under evaluation for efficacy for UTI usually exclude patients with chronic renal insufficiency. As a result, there are few data on the urine concentrations of drugs that are licensed for the treatment of UTI in patients with underlying renal disease. Of interest, there are only a few reports of clinical or microbiologic antimicrobial treatment failures in patients with renal insufficiency and cystitis or pyelonephritis. Perhaps this is not a serious problem, or, more likely, the sporadic nature of the problem has failed to generate a coordinated multicenter evaluation. At present, a prudent approach is to treat the patient who has pyelonephritis with an active fluoroquinolone alone after appropriate dose reduction. Fluoroquinolones should also be effective in patients with urethritis/cystitis. Trimethoprim alone is an alternative for cystitis treatment, with the caveat that 15 to 20% of the isolates may be resistant. There is no need to add sulfamethoxazole as the patients with low creatinine clearances will likely have subtherapeutic urine concentrations. It is also suggested that nitrofurantoin not be used because of low urine concentrations. Regardless of the drug used, a patient s failure to respond may represent resistant bacteria or inadequate urine concentrations of the prescribed drug. This subject deserves more attention. References 1. Fihn SD: Acute uncomplicated urinary tract infection in women. N Engl J Med 349: 259 266, 2003 2. Bennett WM, Craven R: Urinary tract infections in patients with severe renal disease. JAMA 236: 945 948, 1976 3. Elzinga LW, Golper TA, Rashad AL, Carr ME, Bennett WM: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in cyst fluid from autosomal dominant polycystic kidneys. Kidney Int 32: 884 888, 1987 4. Elzinga LW, Golper TA, Rashad AL, Carr ME, Bennett WM: Ciprofloxacin activity in cyst fluid from polycystic kidneys. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 32: 844 847, 1988 5. Patterson JE, Andriole VT: Bacterial urinary tract infections in diabetes. Infect Dis Clin North Am 11: 735 749, 1997 6. Meiland R, Geerlings SE, Hoepelman AIM: Management of bacterial urinary tract infections in adult patients with diabetes mellitus. Drugs 62: 1859 1868, 2002 7. Boyko EJ, Fihn SD, Scholes D, Chen C-L, Normand EH, Yarbro P: Diabetes and the risk of acute urinary tract infection among postmenopausal women. Diabetes Care 25: 1778, 2002 8. Nicolle LE: Urinary tract infection in diabetes. Curr Opin Infect Dis 18: 49 53, 2005 9. Kunin CM: Urinary Tract Infections, 5th Ed., Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 1997, pp 144 147 10. Frimodt-Moller N: Correlation between pharmacokinetic/ pharmacodynamic parameters and efficacy for antibiotics in the treatment of urinary tract infection. Int J Antimicrob Agents 19: 546 553, 2002 11. Hooton TM, Besser R, Foxman B, Fritsche TR, Nicolle LE: Acute uncomplicated cystitis in an era of increasing antibiotic resistance: A proposed approach to empirical therapy. Clin Infect Dis 39: 75 80, 2004 12. Hooton TM: The current management strategies for community-acquired urinary tract infection. Infect Dis Clin North Am 17: 303 332, 2003 13. Biedenbach DJ, Moet GJ, Jones RN: Occurrence and antimicrobial resistance pattern comparisons among bloodstream isolates from the SENTRY Antimicrobial Surveillance Program (1997 2002). Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis 50: 59 69, 2004 14. Kunin CM. Urinary Tract Infections, 5th Ed., Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 1997, pp 60 61

Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 1: 327 331, 2006 UTI and Renal Insufficiency 331 15. Aronoff GR, Berns JS, Brier ME, Golper TA, Morrison G, Singer I, Swan SK, Bennett WM: Drug Prescribing in Renal Failure, 4th Ed., Philadelphia, American College of Physicians, 1999 16. Gilbert DN, Moellering RC, Eliopoulos GM, Sande MA: The Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy, 35th Ed., Hyde Park, Vermont, Antimicrobial Therapy Inc., 2005 17. Gasser TC, Ebert SC, Graversen PH, Madsen PO: Ciprofloxacin pharmacokinetics in patients with normal and impaired renal function. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 31: 709 712, 1987 18. Wexler HM: In vitro activity of ertapenem: Review of recent studies. J Antimicrob Chemother 53[Suppl 2]: 11 21, 2004 19. Muther RS, Bennett WM: Concentration of antibiotics in simple renal cysts. J Urol 124: 596, 1980 20. Talon DA, Stamm WE, Hooton TM, Moran GJ, Burke T, Iravani A, Reuning-Scherer J, Church DA: Comparison of ciprofloxacin (7 days) and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (14 days) for acute uncomplicated pyelonephritis in women. A randomized trial. JAMA 283: 1583 1590, 2000 21. Physicians Desk Reference, 59th Ed., Montvale, New Jersey, Thomson PDR, 2005 22. Amsden GW: Tables of antimicrobial agent pharmacology. In: Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 6th Ed., edited by Mandell GL, Bennett JE, Dolin R, Philadelphia, Churchill Livingstone, 2005, pp 634 702 23. Bamberger DM, Foxworth JW, Bridwell DL, Shain CS, Gerdin DN: Extravascular antimicrobial distribution and the respective blood and urine concentrations in humans. In: Antibiotics in Laboratory Medicine, 5th Ed., edited by Lorian V, Philadelphia, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2005, pp 719 814 24. Papapetropoulou M, Papavassiliou J, Legakis NJ: Effect of the ph and osmolality of urine on the antibacterial activity of gentamicin. J Antimicrob Chemother 12: 571 575, 1983 25. Hooton TM, Scholes D, Gupta K, Stapleton AE, Roberts PL, Stamm WE: Amoxicillin-clavulanate vs ciprofloxacin for the treatment of uncomplicated cystitis in women: A randomized trial. JAMA 293: 949 955, 2005 26. Gupta K, Hooton TM, Stamm WE: Isolation of fluoroquinolone-resistant rectal Escherichia coli after treatment of acute uncomplicated cystitis. J Antimicrob Chemother 56: 243 246, 2005 27. Sullivan JM, Bueschen AJ, Schlegel JU: Nitrofurantoin, sulfamethizole and cephalexin urinary concentrations in unequally functioning pyelonephritic kidneys. J Urol 114: 343 347, 1975 28. Goff JB, Chlegel JU, O Dell RM: Urinary excretion of nalidixic acid, sulfamethizole and nitrofurantoin in patients with reduced renal function. J Urol 99: 371 375, 1968 29. Hooton TM, Besser R, Foxman B, Fritsche TR, Nicolle LE: Acute uncomplicated cystitis in an era of increasing antibiotic resistance: A proposed approach to empirical therapy. Clin Infect Dis 39: 75 80, 2005 30. Craig WA, Kunin CM: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole: Pharmacodynamic effects of urinary ph and impaired renal clearance. Ann Intern Med 78: 491 497, 1973 31. Gilbert DN: Aminoglycosides. In: Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 6th Ed., edited by Mandell GL, Bennett JE, Dolin R, Philadelphia, Churchill Livingstone, 2005, pp 328 356 32. Bailey RR, Peddie B, McRae CU: Antibiotic concentrations in the urine from kidneys of unequal function. Clin Nephrol 17: 258 261, 1982