A Prospective Study of Asymptomatic Bacteriuria in Sexually Active Young Women
Thomas M. Hooton, M.D., Delia Scholes, Ph.D., Ann E. Stapleton, M.D., Pacita L. Roberts, M.S., Carol Winter, A.R.N.P., Kalpana Gupta, M.D., M.P.H., Mansour Samadpour, Ph.D., and Walter E. Stamm, M.D.
Background Asymptomatic bacteriuria is common in young women,but little is known about its pathogenesis, natural history,risk factors, and temporal association with symptomatic urinarytract infection.
Methods We prospectively evaluated 796 sexually active, nonpregnantwomen from 18 through 40 years of age over a period of six monthsfor the occurrence of asymptomatic bacteriuria (defined as atleast 10 5 colony-forming units of urinary tract pathogens permilliliter). The women were patients at either a universitystudent health center or a health maintenance organization (HMO).Periodic urine cultures were taken, daily diaries were kept,and regularly scheduled interviews were performed. Escherichiacoli strains were tested for hemolysin, the papG genotype, andthe ribosomal RNA type.
Results The prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria (the proportionof urine cultures with bacteriuria in asymptomatic women) was5 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 4 percent to 6 percent)among women in the university group and 6 percent (95 percentconfidence interval, 5 percent to 8 percent) among women inthe HMO group. Persistent asymptomatic bacteriuria with thesame E. coli strain was rare. Symptomatic urinary tract infectiondeveloped within one week after 8 percent of occasions on whicha culture showed asymptomatic bacteriuria, as compared with1 percent of occasions when asymptomatic bacteriuria was notfound (P<0.001). Asymptomatic bacteriuria was associatedwith the same risk factors as for symptomatic urinary tractinfection, particularly the use of a diaphragm plus spermicideand sexual intercourse.
Conclusions Asymptomatic bacteriuria in young women is commonbut rarely persists. It is a strong predictor of subsequentsymptomatic urinary tract infection.
Source Information
From the Departments of Medicine (T.M.H., A.E.S., P.L.R., C.W., K.G., W.E.S.), Epidemiology (D.S.), and Environmental Health (M.S.), University of Washington School of Medicine and School of Public Health and Community Medicine; and the Center for Health Studies, Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound (D.S.) all in Seattle.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Hooton at Harborview Medical Center, 325 Ninth Ave. (Box 359930), Seattle, WA 98104, or at hooton{at}u.washington.edu.
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