Acute lower urinary tract infection in adults (no fever or flank pain) (Antimicrobial)

Warning

Evidence of bacteria in urine (culture or positive dipstick test) but NO signs or symptoms of infection - antibiotic therapy is not required, except in pregnancy. See NHS Highland guideline: UTI Management in Pregnancy (NHS Highland intranet access required).

Women with symptoms or signs - for women with less severe or limited symptoms, a delayed prescription for antibiotics may be a suitable management option in some patients. Symptom relief with ibuprofen along with general advice about maintaining fluid intake may provide resolution of symptoms without need for antibiotics. Use trimethoprim and Nitrofurantoin with caution in severe renal impairment (eGFR less than 30mL/min). If no response in 3 days, send mid stream sample (MSU), continue on the same antibiotic and await sensitivity of organism isolated. Use narrow spectrum where possible. When treating symptomatic UTI in pregnancy only, perform a culture 7 days after completion of antibiotics as test of cure. See NHS Highland guideline: UTI Management in Pregnancy (NHS Highland intranet access required).

In pregnancy, short-term use of nitrofurantoin is unlikely to cause problems to the foetus (at term, theoretical risk of neonatal haemolysis).  Trimethoprim, as a folate antagonist, has a theoretical risk in first trimester in patients with poor diet or on another folate antagonist – manufacturers recommend avoiding in pregnancy.  Infection specialists may still recommend trimethoprim in pregnancy on an individual patient basis. See NHS Highland guideline: UTI Management in Pregnancy (NHS Highland intranet access required).

Asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnancy - confirm bacteriuria with second MSU sample and treat according to sensitivity for 7 days. Repeat urine culture at each antenatal visit until deliverySee NHS Highland guideline: UTI Management in Pregnancy (NHS Highland intranet access required).

Men with symptoms or signs - send urine sample for culture before staring empiric treatment and rationalise once sensitivity information available. If fever present, treat as prostatitis. If uncomplicated lower UTI suspected, treat as for women with signs and symptoms for 7 days.

Recurrent UTI - refer to Urology Shared Clinical Guideline on Recurrent UTIs, consider discussing treatment of recurrent UTI in women and catheterised patients with Microbiology. Consider alternatives to antimicrobial management due to high risk of resistance developing – see Scottish Antimicrobial Prescribing Group Guidance document.
If a patient has 2 or more episodes of symptomatic UTI in a 6 months period, continuous low-dose antibiotic prophylaxis or single dose post-coital prophylaxis can be considered. After counselling, and when behaviour modifications and non-antimicrobial measures have been unsuccessful, a 3 month course of low dose nitrofurantoin 50mg daily may be appropriate. This can be extended to 6 months in total but must be reviewed thereafter. After 6 months of continuous therapy with nitrofurantoin there is a significant risk of developing hepatitis or chronic pulmonary reactions such as pulmonary fibrosis and diffuse interstitial pneumonitis. For advice in pregnancy or where nitrofurantoin is unsuitable, please discuss with Microbiology. The decision to initiate low dose prophylaxis must be clearly documented to ensure all staff caring for the patient are clear of the date of review and expected duration of therapy.

NOTE: Long-term catheters should be changed after starting antibiotic treatment.

For glossary of terms see Glossary.

Drug details

Avoid empiric use in pregnancy - see notes above.

Trimethoprim 200mg twice daily

  • Women all ages 3 days
  • Men 7 days
  • Catheter-associated (all genders) 7 days

If any recent systemic antibiotic use in the last 3 months. Avoid use at term - see notes above.

Nitrofurantoin 100mg m/r twice daily

  • Women all ages 3 days
  • Men 7 days
  • Catheter-associated (all genders) 7 days

Consider the risk of C. difficile infection before prescribing (see Factors Associated with Developing CDI on TAM).

OR cefalexin 500mg three times daily

  • Women all ages 3 days
  • Men 7 days
  • Catheter-associated (all genders) 7 days

ONLY AFTER POSITIVE RESULT FROM MICROBIOLOGY

The tables below are ONLY AFTER POSITIVE RESULT from Microbiology for the current infective episode.
F
or empiric treatment of urinary tract infection, see table above.
  • The drugs are listed in order of preference from narrow spectrum and limited side effects to broad spectrum with significant side effects.
  • Note: in line with MHRA advice (January 2024) ciprofloxacin should ONLY be used if no other agents are suitable, due to the risk of adverse drug reactions.

First line

ONLY AFTER POSITIVE MICROBIOLOGY RESULT

Nitrofurantoin 100mg MR twice daily

OR Trimethoprim 200mg twice daily

OR Amoxicillin 500mg three times daily

OR Cefalexin 500mg three times daily

  • Female: 3 days
  • Male: 7 days

Second line

ONLY AFTER POSITIVE MICROBIOLOGY RESULT

Fosfomycin 3g single dose

  • Female: single dose
  • Male: repeat on day 3

Alternative second line

ONLY AFTER POSITIVE MICROBIOLOGY RESULT

Pivemecillinam 400mg stat, then 200mg three times daily

  • Female: 3 days
  • Male: 7 days

Third line

ONLY AFTER POSITIVE MICROBIOLOGY RESULT

Co-amoxiclav 625mg three times daily

  • Female: 3 days
  • Male: 7 days

No other suitable option

ONLY AFTER POSITIVE MICROBIOLOGY RESULT

ONLY IF NO OTHER SUITABLE OPTIONS DUE TO SIDE EFFECT

Ciprofloxacin 250mg twice daily

  • Female: 3 days
  • Male: 7 days

Editorial Information

Last reviewed: 31/10/2024

Next review date: 29/10/2027

Author(s): Antimicrobial Management Team.

Version: 2

Approved By: TAM Subgroup of ADTC

Reviewer name(s): Alison Macdonald, Area Antimicrobial Pharmacist.

Document Id: AMT179