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Bacteriuria in Elderly Institutionalized Men

List of authors.
  • Lindsay E. Nicolle, M.D.,
  • Janet Bjornson, B.Sc.(Pharm.),
  • Godfrey K. M. Harding, M.D.,
  • and J. A. MacDonell, M.D.

Abstract

Over a two-year period we obtained monthly urine samples from all noncatheterized male residents on two geriatric wards to determine the occurrence and optimal management of bacteriuria in this population. Among 88 men the prevalence of bacteriuria was 33 per cent, and the incidence was 45 infections per 100 patients per year. Outcomes after single-dose therapy for asymptomatic bacteriuria with 43 courses of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and 23 of tobramycin included 15 cures, 40 relapses, and 11 treatment failures. Thirty-six residents who had a relapse or in whom single-dose therapy failed were randomly assigned to receive therapy to eradicate bacteriuria or to receive no therapy. All 20 residents who received no therapy remained bacteriuric. The 16 residents who received therapy had fewer months of bacteriuria after randomization, but at the end of the study only one remained free of bacteriuria. Mortality and infectious morbidity after randomization were similar in the two groups.

These data suggest that asymptomatic bacteriuria is common in elderly Institutionalized men and that therapy is neither necessary nor effective. (N Engl J Med 1983; 309:1420–5.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a grant from the Canadian Geriatrics Research Society and a grant (MA5973) from the Medical Research Council of Canada. Dr. Nicolle was a recipient of a Medical Research Council of Canada Research Fellowship.

We are indebted to J. Williams, M. Sewart, and the other staff of Wards 2S and 3S at Deer Lodge Hospital for their enthusiastic support and cooperation, to R. Scharath, G. Gray, and B. Urias for technical assistance, and to J. Glasgow for help in preparing the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine, Sections of Geriatrics and Infectious Diseases, and the Department of Medical Microbiology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. Address reprint requests to Dr. Nicolle at the Office of Infection Control, M2–040, Calgary General Hospital, 841 Centre Ave. East, Calgary, AB T2E 0A1, Canada.

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