Please note: In 2003, the CTF updated its Grades of Recommendations to include an "I Recommendation" for situations where insufficient evidence exists to allow a recommendation to be made. (Formerly, these situations were captured under a "C Recommendation".) This change is not retroactive, and all "C Recommendations" made prior to 2003 have not been reevaluated in light of the new "I" recommendation grade. For a discussion of these recommendation grades, please link to the 2003 article in the Canadian Medical Association Journal here.
These recommendations were finalized by the Task Force in October 1993
Bacteriuria in the elderly is usually asymptomatic. Morbidity with asymptomatic bacteriuria may include short-term complications of acute symptomatic infection and potential long-term complications of renal failure or mortality. Measuring the burden of illness potentially related to asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly is, however, limited by several factors. First, no population-based studies in the ambulatory elderly document the occurence and impact of symptomatic urinary infection. Second, chronic genitourinary symptoms are frequent in the elderly population. Such symptoms are not ameliorated by treatment of associated asymptomatic bacteriuria and occur with equal frequency in bacteriuric and nonbacteriuric elderly populations.<5> Thus, while not due to bacteriuria, they may complicate the identification of symptomatic infection. Finally, the multiple co-morbid illnesses and functional disability of the elderly institutionalized population leads to impaired communication and identification of symptomatic infection.
Limited reports document the frequency of symptomatic infection in elderly populations. Boscia et al reported 10 of 61 elderly ambulatory women with untreated asymptomatic bacteriuria became symptomatic during 6 months of follow-up, an incidence of 0.9/1000 patient days.<6> Mims et al followed 238 elderly men from 1 to 4.5 years, 29 of whom were initially bacteriuric and 17 of 134 who were followed for one year or more who subsequently became bacteriuric.<7> Only 5 patients of the initial bacteriuric group became symptomatic and they were apparently treated with antimicrobial therapy with resolution and without further complication. In 50 elderly institutionalized women with asymptomatic bacteriuria, half of whom were treated, 4 episodes of symptomatic infection occurred in one year of follow-up, an incidence of 0.26/1000 patient days.<8> In 36 elderly institutionalized men with asymptomatic bacteriuria followed for a mean of 10.6 months, 16 of whom were treated with antimicrobials, 4 episodes of symptomatic infection or 0.34/1000 patient days developed.<9>
Urinary infection is the most common cause of bacteremia in both institutionalized and noninstitutionalized elderly populations.<3,4> Women over age 65 with acute non-obstructive pyelonephritis are more likely to be bacteremic than younger women. The case fatality rate associated with bacteremic urinary infection in the elderly has been reported to be from 10-30%. Despite these observations urinary infection is rarely a direct cause of death in elderly subjects.<3,4>
Several other clinical presentations in the elderly are frequently attributed to urinary infection because of the difficulty in ascertainment of symptoms and high prevalence of bacteriuria in this population. Where specific symptom presentations other than pyelonephritis or lower tract irritative symptoms have been critically studied, however, urinary infection has not been documented to be an important contributor to such symptoms. For instance, gross hematuria is seldom attributable to hemorrhagic cystitis in institutionalized elderly subjects despite a high prevalence of bacteriuria in residents with gross hematuria.<10> Limited studies suggest that nonspecific changes in clinical status in the absence of fever are not attributable to urinary infection.<11> The majority of febrile episodes of uncertain cause in the non-catheterized bacteriuric elderly are likely not caused by invasive urinary infection, although the contribution of urinary infection in an individual case may be impossible to ascertain.
The contribution of asymptomatic bacteriuria to mortality in the elderly has been controversial. Initial studies from Finland<12> and Greece<13> suggested decreased survival in both women and men with asymptomatic bacteriuria. Subsequent studies in community populations from Sweden<14> and Finland<15> have not supported these initial observations. No association of bacteriuria with mortality has been reported for the institutionalized population.<16> Currently evidence does not support a direct or indirect causal association of asymptomatic bacteriuria with mortality in elderly populations. In addition, there is no evidence that asymptomatic bacteriuria, by itself, progresses to renal failure in this population.
No prospective, randomized study of therapy vs. no therapy for asymptomatic bacteriuria in the non-institutionalized elderly male has been reported. One prospective cohort study provides limited data describing morbidity.<7> In this study, 234 elderly men were followed for up to 4.5 years, 134 for over one year. Twenty-nine were bacteriuric at initial screening and 20 became positive in follow-up. The majority (76%) of bacteriuric subjects spontaneously cleared bacteriuria after a mean period of 4.4 months (range 3-12 months). Only 5 (17%) bacteriuric subjects were treated for symptomatic infection and bacteriuria recurred rapidly during post-treatment in 3 of these 5. The symptom presentations were not described, and no significant detrimental outcomes with development of symptomatic infection were reported. This study suggested a high frequency of spontaneous resolution of asymptomatic bacteriuria in elderly non-institutionalized men and a low frequency of symptom development. It was concluded that screening for and treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria was not warranted in ambulatory elderly men.
One characteristic of the institutionalized bacteriuric elderly is the rapid recurrence of bacteriuria following antimicrobial therapy.<8,9> In most individuals, treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria is followed by an extremely short period free of bacteriuria, with over 50% recurring within 2-4 weeks of discontinuing antimicrobials. In institutionalized women with urine cultures obtained monthly, screening and antimicrobial treatment of all identified episodes decreased the overall prevalence of bacteriuria in the population by only 30% over a one year period.<8> Thus, for the institutionalized population, even intensive antimicrobial therapy for asymptomatic bacteriuria has limited impact on bacteriuria. Even if benefits of treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly were identified, frequent repeated screening for urinary infection would be required.
Subjects with long-term indwelling catheters are virtually always bacteriuric. Screening for bacteriuria or pyuria in these subjects will not identify those at risk for morbidity.<17> Antimicrobial therapy of asymptomatic catheter-acquired bacteriuria does not decrease morbidity from urinary infection, but will lead to emergence of organisms of increased resistance.<18>
This review was initiated in June 1993 and recommendations were finalized by the Task Force in October 1993.
Link to Structured Abstract of this review
Link to Summary Table of this review
Link to Selected References list of this review
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Task Force on Preventive Health Care
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Original Copyright
© 1994 Minister of Supply and Services Canada.
Last modified March 27, 1998.