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Prophylactic Ciprofloxacin for Catheter-associated Urinary-tract Infection

Overview
Journal Lancet
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty General Medicine
Date 1992 Apr 18
PMID 1348797
Citations 19
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Abstract

Patients receiving antibiotics during bladder drainage have a lower incidence of urinary-tract infections compared with similar patients not on antibiotics. However, antibiotic prophylaxis in patients with a urinary catheter is opposed because of the fear of inducing resistant bacterial strains. We have done a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of prophylactic ciprofloxacin in selected groups of surgical patients who had postoperative bladder drainage scheduled to last for 3 to 14 days. Patients were randomly assigned to receive placebo (n = 61), 250 mg ciprofloxacin per day (n = 59), or 500 mg ciprofloxacin twice daily (n = 64) from postoperative day 2 until catheter removal. 75% of placebo patients were bacteriuric at catheter removal compared with 16% of ciprofloxacin-treated patients (relative risk [RR] [95% CI] 4.7 [3.0-7.4]). The prevalence of pyuria among placebo patients increased from 11% to 42% while the catheter was in place; by contrast, the rate of pyuria was 11% or less in patients receiving ciprofloxacin (RR 4.0 [2.1-7.3]). 20% of placebo patients had symptomatic urinary-tract infections, including 3 with septicaemia, compared with 5% of the ciprofloxacin groups (RR 4.0 [1.6-10.2]). Bacteria isolated from urines of placebo patients at catheter removal were mostly species of enterobacteriaceae (37%), staphylococci (26%), and Enterococcus faecalis (20%), whereas species isolated from urines of ciprofloxacin patients were virtually all gram-positive. Ciprofloxacin-resistant mutants of normally sensitive gram-negative bacteria were not observed. Ciprofloxacin prophylaxis is effective and safe in the prevention of catheter-associated urinary tract infection and related morbidity in selected groups of patients requiring 3 to 14 days of bladder drainage.

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Postoperative Prevention of Urinary Tract Infections in Patients after Urogynecological Surgeries-Nonantibiotic Herbal (Canephron) versus Antibiotic Prophylaxis (Fosfomycin Trometamol): A Parallel-Group, Randomized, Noninferiority Experimental Trial.

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Comparison of guideline recommendations for antimicrobial prophylaxis in urologic procedures: variability, lack of consensus, and contradictions.

Ivan S, Sindhwani P Int Urol Nephrol. 2018; 50(11):1923-1937.

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Single-walled carbon nanotubes-ciprofloxacin nanoantibiotic: strategy to improve ciprofloxacin antibacterial activity.

Assali M, Zaid A, Abdallah F, Almasri M, Khayyat R Int J Nanomedicine. 2017; 12:6647-6659.

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[Antibiotic prophylaxis for short-term catheter bladder drainage in adults].

Schmidt S, Schneidewind L Urologe A. 2015; 54(10):1439-42.

PMID: 26385243 DOI: 10.1007/s00120-015-3958-1.


Antibiotic prophylaxis for short-term catheter bladder drainage in adults.

Lusardi G, Lipp A, Shaw C Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013; (7):CD005428.

PMID: 23824735 PMC: 7388872. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD005428.pub2.