Diagnostics (Dec 2022)

Spectrum of Bacterial Pathogens from Urinary Infections Associated with Struvite and Metabolic Stones

  • Adam Halinski,
  • Kamran Hassan Bhatti,
  • Luca Boeri,
  • Jonathan Cloutier,
  • Kaloyan Davidoff,
  • Ayman Elqady,
  • Goran Fryad,
  • Mohamed Gadelmoula,
  • Hongyi Hui,
  • Kremena Petkova,
  • Elenko Popov,
  • Bapir Rawa,
  • Iliya Saltirov,
  • Francisco Rodolfo Spivacow,
  • Belthangady Monu Zeeshan Hameed,
  • Katarzyna Arkusz,
  • Alberto Trinchieri,
  • Noor Buchholz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13010080
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 80

Abstract

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Objective: The purposes of this multi-center study were to evaluate the rate of infection stones and to evaluate the urine cultures of patients with infection stones. Materials: Charts of adulpatients with urinary stones were reviewed and data on stone analyses and urine cultures were collected. Results: In total, 1204 renal stone formers (RSFs) from 10 countries were included (776 males, 428 females). Fifty-six patients (4.6%) had struvite stones. The highest frequency of struvite stones was observed in India (23%) and Pakistan (18%). Lower rates were reported in Canada (2%), China (3%), Argentina (3%), Iraq (3%), Italy (3.5%) and Poland (3%), and intermediate rates in Egypt (5.5%) and Bulgaria (5.4%). Urine cultures were retrieved from 508 patients. Patients with struvite stones had a positive culture in 64.3% of the samples and patients with other stones, in 26.7%. In struvite stones, the most common isolates were Escherichia coli (27.7%) and Proteus spp. (27.7%), followed by Klebsiella spp. (16.7%); in other types of stone, it was Escherichia coli (47.6%), followed by Gram-positive bacteria (14.0%) Conclusions: The struvite stone composition was associated with a urinary infection, although an infection was not demonstrable with a conventional midstream urine culture in about 30%.

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