European Urology Open Science (Mar 2022)

Multidrug-resistant Uro-associated Escherichia coli Populations and Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections in Patients Performing Clean Intermittent Self-catheterisation

  • Catherine Mowbray,
  • Aaron Tan,
  • Maxime Vallée,
  • Holly Fisher,
  • Thomas Chadwick,
  • Catherine Brennand,
  • Katherine E. Walton,
  • Robert S. Pickard,
  • Christopher Harding,
  • Phillip D. Aldridge,
  • Judith Hall

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37
pp. 90 – 98

Abstract

Read online

Background: The AnTIC trial linked continuous low-dose antibiotic prophylaxis treatments to a lower incidence of symptomatic urinary tract infections (UTIs) among individuals performing clean intermittent self-catheterisation (CISC). Objective: To explore potential mechanisms underlying the protective effects of low-dose antibiotic prophylaxis treatments, blood and urine samples and uro-associated Escherichia coli isolates from AnTIC participants were analysed. Design, setting, and participants: Blood samples (n = 204) were analysed for TLR gene polymorphisms associated with UTI susceptibility and multiple urine samples (n = 558) were analysed for host urogenital responses. E.coli sequence data for 45 temporal isolates recovered from the urine samples of 16 trial participants in the prophylaxis (n = 9) and no-prophylaxis (n = 7) study arms, and characterised by multidrug resistance (MDR), were used to classify individual strains. Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: TLR polymorphism data were analysed using Poisson regression. Concentrations of urine host defence markers were analysed using linear mixed-effects models, which accounted for repeated urine samples. Results and limitations: Urine samples from CISC users, irrespective of antibiotic treatment regimens, were associated with robust urothelial innate responses. No links were identified between TLR genotype and CISC user susceptibility to recurrent UTIs. Microbiological study data were limited to the predominant MDR E. coli population; participants prescribed low-dose prophylactic antibiotics were predominantly colonised by a single uro-associated E. coli strain, while participants given acute antibiotic treatments were each colonised by more than one E. coli strain. Conclusions: Antibiotic treatments did not impact urogenital responses to infection in CISC users. Host genetics in terms of TLR polymorphisms played no role in determining CISC user susceptibility to or protection from recurrent UTIs. Prophylactic antibiotic treatments associated with MDR E. coli were associated with colonisation by stable uro-associated E. coli genotypes. Patient summary: Our findings show that the natural urogenital defences of clean intermittent self-catheterisation (CISC) users were not impacted by antibiotic treatments. For some CISC users, prophylaxis with low-dose antibiotics selected for a stable, predominantly, Esherichia coli rich uromicrobiota.

Keywords