dc.description.abstract | Outpatient treatment of urinary tract infections is compromised due to rapid development of
resistance to first line antimicrobials leading to increased healthcare cost. Continuous resistance
surveillance is important when making empiric therapy decisions. This study aimed to determine
the antibiotic sensitivity rates of uropathogens to first line antibiotics. Urine cultures received to
the microbiology laboratory at University Hospital KDU from January to June 2022 were
retrospectively analyzed. Of 2626 specimens 431(16.4%) yielded significant bacteriuria.
Commonest organism from outpatients were Enterobacterales, (122/150,81.3%) followed by
Staphylococcus species (8/150,5.3%), and among inward patients, Enterobacterales
(152/227,66.9%), were commonest followed by Candida (33/227, 14.5%) Enterococcus
(17/227, 7.4%) and Pseudomonas (8/227, 3.5%) while Candida (31/54, 57.4%) was the
commonest among ICU patients. Antibiotic sensitivity of Enterobacterales to first line antibiotics
among outpatients, inward and ICU patients were: gentamicin (83.6%,85.6%,40%),
nitrofurantoin (78.4%,75%,40%), cefuroxime (76.7%,65.4%,20%), cephalexin
(68.5%,58.8%20%), norfloxacin (67.8%,53.1%,0%), co-trimoxazole (67%,56.8%,0%), coamoxiclav
(66.1%,59.2%,20%), ciprofloxacin (58.5%,42.8%,0%), nalidixic acid
(48.2%,38.6%,0%), and amoxicillin (20%,24.2%,20%), respectively. Overall sensitivity of
pseudomonas species to ceftazidime (83.3%,50%), gentamicin (83.3%, 25%), norfloxacin
(67.7%,25%), ciprofloxacin (66.7%,25%) and were observed in inward and ICU patients while
vancomycin resistance was detected as 71.4% and 67% to enterococci respectively.
Nitrofurantoin can be considered as a first line oral option for both outpatients and inward
patients, but its use is limited to cystitis. Gentamicin is another option to be used as a single agent
or in combination, for inpatient treatment or as outpatient parenteral therapy. Effectiveness of
many other first line oral antibiotics as step down therapy has become low especially among ICU
patients. | en_US |