| Literature DB >> 32918601 |
James Diviney1, Mervyn S Jaswon2,3.
Abstract
Urinary tract infection is a commonly occurring paediatric infection associated with significant morbidity. Diagnosis is challenging as symptoms are non-specific and definitive diagnosis requires an uncontaminated urine sample to be obtained. Common techniques for sampling in non-toilet-trained children include clean catch, bag, pad, in-out catheterisation and suprapubic aspiration. The pros and cons of each method are examined in detail in this review. They differ significantly in frequency of use, contamination rates and acceptability to parents and clinicians. National guidance of which to use differs significantly internationally. No method is clearly superior. For non-invasive testing, clean catch sampling has a lower likelihood of contamination and can be made more efficient through stimulation of voiding in younger children. In invasive testing, suprapubic aspiration gives a lower likelihood of contamination, a high success rate and a low complication rate, but is considered painful and is not preferred by parents. Urine dipstick testing is validated for ruling in or out UTI provided that leucocyte esterase (LE) and nitrite testing are used in combination.Entities:
Keywords: Clean catch; Dipstick testing; In-out catheterisation; Suprapubic aspiration; UTI; Urinary tract infection; Urine sampling
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32918601 PMCID: PMC8172492 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-020-04742-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Comparison of contamination rates by collection method
| Method | Contamination rates reported |
|---|---|
| Clean catch | 4.5% [ |
| Bag | 18% [ |
| Pad | 9.1% [ |
| Catheterisation | 8% [ |
| Suprapubic aspiration (SPA) | 0–7% [ |
Odds ratio of urinary tract infection (UTI) by extent of leucocyte esterase (LE) positivity for pad and clean catch sampling
| Extent of positivity of LE | Odds ratio of UTI from pad sampling [ | Odds ratio of UTI from clean catch sampling [ |
|---|---|---|
| Trace | 0.87 (non-significant) | 5.4 (significant) |
| + | 2.06 (non-significant) | 2.47 (non-significant) |
| ++ | 1.63 (non-significant) | 19.61 (significant) |
| +++ | 3.27 (significant) | 66.6 (significant) |
Likelihood ratio of urinary tract infection (UTI) depending on interpretation of leucocyte esterase (LE) and nitrite results
| Test condition | Positive likelihood ratio for UTI | Negative likelihood ratio for UTI | Sensitivity/specificity for UTI |
|---|---|---|---|
| LE | 6.1 (meta-analysis of 15 studies) [ | 0.20 (meta-analysis of 15 studies) [ | 69.4–100%/69.2–97.8% (meta-analysis of 15 studies) [ 88%/79% (meta-analysis of 95,703 children) [ |
| LE | 28.2 (meta-analysis of 9 studies) [ 22.8 (study of 5017 samples) [ | 0.37 (meta-analysis of 9 studies) [ 0.22 (study of 5017 samples) [ | 30–89.2%/> 90% (meta-analysis of 15 studies) [ 92.5%/39.4% [ 82.5%/81.3% [ |