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Antibiotic prescriptions and risk factors for antimicrobial resistance in patients hospitalized with urinary tract infection: a matched case-control study using the French health insurance database (SNDS)

Marion Opatowski, Christian Brun‐Buisson, Mehdi Touat, J. Salomon, Didier Guillemot, Philippe Tuppin, Laurence Watier

2021BMC Infectious Diseases26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Antibiotic resistance is increasing among urinary pathogens, resulting in worse clinical and economic outcomes. We analysed factors associated with antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) in patients hospitalized for urinary tract infection, using the comprehensive French national claims database. METHODS: Hospitalized urinary tract infections were identified from 2015 to 2017. Cases (due to ARB) were matched to controls (without ARB) according to year, age, sex, infection, and bacterium. Healthcare-associated (HCAI) and community-acquired (CAI) infections were analysed separately; logistic regressions were stratified by sex. RESULTS: From 9460 cases identified, 6468 CAIs and 2855 HCAIs were matched with controls. Over a 12-months window, the risk increased when exposure occurred within the last 3 months. The following risk factors were identified: antibiotic exposure, with an OR reaching 3.6 [2.8-4.5] for men with CAI, mostly associated with broad-spectrum antibiotics; surgical procedure on urinary tract (OR 2.0 [1.5-2.6] for women with HCAI and 1.3 [1.1-1.6] for men with CAI); stay in intensive care unit > 7 days (OR 1.7 [1.2-2.6] for men with HCAI). Studied co-morbidities had no impact on ARB. CONCLUSIONS: This study points out the critical window of 3 months for antibiotic exposure, confirms the impact of broad-spectrum antibiotic consumption on ARB, and supports the importance of prevention during urological procedures, and long intensive care unit stays.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineUrinary systemMedical microbiologyAntibioticsMedical prescriptionAntibiotic resistanceIntensive care unitInternal medicineInfection controlIntensive care medicineDatabaseMicrobiologyImmunologyBiologyPharmacologyComputer scienceUrinary Tract Infections ManagementAntibiotic Use and ResistanceBladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments
Antibiotic prescriptions and risk factors for antimicrobial resistance in patients hospitalized with urinary tract infection: a matched case-control study using the French health insurance database (SNDS) | Litcius