Intended for healthcare professionals

Primary Care 10-minute consultation

Recurrent urinary tract infection in women

BMJ 2003; 327 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.327.7425.1204 (Published 20 November 2003) Cite this as: BMJ 2003;327:1204
  1. Josip Car (josip.car{at}imperial.ac.uk), doctoral student in patient-doctor partnerships1,
  2. Aziz Sheikh, professor of primary care research and development2
  1. 1Department of Primary Health Care and General Practice, Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine, London SW7 2AZ
  2. 2Division of Community Health Services: GP Section, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH10 5PF
  1. Correspondence to: J Car

    Introduction

    A 23 year old female student complains of urinary frequency and pain on micturition. She has had similar episodes on four other occasions in the last six months. She wants to know what can be done now and how to prevent further infections.

    What issues you should cover

    Is it really a urinary tract infection? Differential diagnoses include common genital infections (such as sexually transmitted infections and Candida vulvovaginitis), non-infective cystitis (caused by nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and other drugs), and urethral syndrome (a complex of symptoms that indicate a urinary tract infection but without an underlying infection).

    Type of urinary tract infection Symptoms that indicate a lower urinary tract infection are discomfort on urination, increased frequency of urination, urgency, and a change in the smell of the urine. Symptoms that indicate an upper urinary tract infection are a high temperature, pain in the loin, nausea, vomiting, and rigors.

    History When was the last infection? Recurrent episodes of urinary tract infection may be a relapse of illness (defined as recurrence of infection by the same species within two weeks) or reinfection.

    Predisposing factors Renal problems (such as hydro-nephrosis), bladder problems (such as atonic bladder), and pregnancy all increase the risk of urinary tract infection.

    What you should do

    • Do an appropriate physical examination if her clinical history suggests a different diagnosis (such as a sexually transmitted infection), an upper urinary tract infection, or an underlying physical cause for the infection.

    • Sexually transmitted infections will need treatment, and contacts will need to be traced.

    • We need better evidence about the validity of dipstick analysis, but a reasonable approach is to treat on the basis of dipstick findings (positive results for nitrite or leucocytes) and reserve urine culture, if symptoms are not settling. A urine culture is probably indicated if she is in a high risk group (pregnant women or women with an anatomically or functionally abnormal renal tract).

    Useful reading

    • Baerheim A. Empirical treatment of uncomplicatedcystitis.BMJ 2001;323: 1197-8

    • Hooton TM. Recurrent urinary tract infection in women.Int J Antimicrob Agents 2001;17: 259-68

    • Kontiokari T, Sundqvist K, Nuutinen M, Pokka T, KoskelaM, Uhari M. Randomised trial of cranberry-lingonberry juice and Lactobacillus GG drink for the prevention of urinary tract infections in women. BMJ 2001;322: 1571-5

    • Trimethoprim is the first choice of treatment, except in women from communities with a high rate of resistance, when you should follow the local guidance. A three day course of antibiotic treatment should suffice for most women with lower urinary tract infection. If despite treatment her symptoms persist or worsen, do a urine culture and prescribe antibiotics according to the results of the culture and sensitivity tests. Upper urinary tract infection in otherwise healthy women can be treated with oral antibiotics for 7-10 days, with an early review. Women who are systemically unwell should be admitted to hospital.

    • Underlying anatomical abnormalities in women with recurrent lower urinary tract infection are uncommon; further investigations are not routinely indicated.

    • Explain that risk factors for recurrent urinary tract infection (arbitrarily defined as three or more infections a year) are frequent sexual intercourse, exposure to spermicide (with or without use of a diaphragm), and a new sexual partner.

    • Consider further options to manage recurrent urinary tract infections: she could take a short course of antibiotic treatment at the onset of symptoms that suggest urinary tract infection; she could take prophylactic antibiotic treatment (single 200 mg dose of trimethoprim) after sexual intercourse if previous infections have been related to sexual intercourse; or she could take a longer course of daily or thrice weekly prophylactic treatment (see table).

    • Explain that prophylactic treatment does not modify the natural history of recurrent urinary tract infections. When such treatment ceases, even after long periods of treatment, more than 50% of women will have another infection within three months.

    • There is some evidence that cranberry juice treats urinary tract infection and prevents its recurrence.

    Antimicrobial regimens for prevention and treatment of recurrent urinary tract infections

    View this table:

    This is part of a series of occasional articles on common problems in primary care

    The series is edited by general practitioners Ann McPerson and Deborah Waller (ann.mcpherson{at}dphpc.ox.ac.uk)

    TheBMJ welcomes contributions from general practitioners to the series

    View Abstract