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Reducing urinary tract infection in female pelvic surgery: A retrospective cohort study

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Authors
Mann, Gurkiran K.; Koenig, Nicole A.; Lee, Terry; Geoffrion, Roxana
Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGY & OBSTETRICS 10.1002/ijgo.14892
Abstract

Objective: To compare prebundle versus postbundle implementation urinary tract infection (UTI) rates among inpatients within 6 weeks of clean-contaminated pelvic reconstructive surgery. 

Methods:The authors conducted a retrospective cohort study from September 2019 to December 2021 at a tertiary hospital. The bundle strategy included the following: universal preoperative UTI check with treatment if positive, replacing prolonged postoperative voiding trials on the ward with earlier discharge and indwelling catheter removal by a nurse continence advisor the next day, and daily cranberry extract for 6 weeks postoperatively. UTI was defined as positive urine culture (>= 100 000 colony-forming unit per mL) in a symptomatic patient. Data analysis involved hypothesis testing and logistic regression. 

Results: The authors reviewed 132 postbundle inpatient charts and retained 93 for analyses. The results were compared with 204 prebundle inpatient charts. The rate of postoperative UTI decreased from 17.6% in the prebundle group to 6.5% after bundle implementation (P = 0.01). The adjusted odds ratio for postbundle versus prebundle likelihood of UTI was 0.35 (95% confidence interval, 0.13-0.98; P = 0.045). Significantly more postbundle patients compared with prebundle patients were discharged home on the first day postoperatively (76.3% vs. 37.7%, P < 0.001). 

Conclusions: A clinical bundle can significantly decrease both UTI rates and hospital stay after pelvic reconstructive surgery.