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Clinical Trial
. 2004 Sep 1;39(5):658-64.
doi: 10.1086/423000. Epub 2004 Aug 13.

A prospective, randomized trial of 3 or 14 days of ciprofloxacin treatment for acute urinary tract infection in patients with spinal cord injury

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

A prospective, randomized trial of 3 or 14 days of ciprofloxacin treatment for acute urinary tract infection in patients with spinal cord injury

Gordon Dow et al. Clin Infect Dis. .

Abstract

Background: Urinary tract infection (UTI) is common among patients with spinal cord injury. The optimal duration of treatment for symptomatic UTI has not been determined.

Methods: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial compared 3-day and 14-day regimens of ciprofloxacin, 250 mg twice daily, for the treatment of acute UTI in patients with spinal cord injury. Patients with pyelonephritis, struvite stones, hydronephrosis, or long-term indwelling catheters were excluded from the trial.

Results: Sixty patients with spinal cord injury were enrolled in the trial, with 30 patients assigned to each study arm. The most common infecting organisms were Klebsiella species (30%), Enterococcus species (22%), and Escherichia coli (22%); 33% of the infections were polymicrobial. Microbiological cure at long-term follow-up was significantly better among patients who received therapy for 14 days than among patients who received therapy for 3 days. By 6 weeks of follow-up, microbiological relapse (in 11 [37%] of 30 patients vs. 2 [7%] of 30 patients; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.38-3.18; P=.01) and symptomatic relapse (in 7 [23%] 30 patients vs. 0 of 30 patients; 95% CI, 1.69-3.13; P=.01) both occurred more frequently in patients treated for 3 days. Reinfection occurred with similar frequency in patients in the 2 study arms. Six of 7 evaluable patients with treatment failure had a fluoroquinolone-resistant organism isolated at enrollment.

Conclusions: For patients with spinal cord injury, treatment of acute symptomatic UTI for 14 days leads to improved clinical and microbiological outcomes, compared with short-course therapy.

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