PEDIATRICS Vol. 105 No. 5 May 2000, p. e59
Received Sep 13, 1999; accepted Nov 29, 1999.
From the Division of Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Background. The majority of young children with fever and urinary tract infections (UTIs) have evidence of pyelonephritis based on renal scans. Resolution of fever during treatment is 1 clinical marker of adequate treatment. Theoretically, prolonged fever may be a clue to complications, such as urinary obstruction or renal abscess.
Objective. Describe the pattern of fever in febrile children undergoing treatment of a UTI. Compare the clinical characteristics of those patients with prolonged fever to those who respond faster to therapy.
Setting. An urban pediatric hospital.
Design. Medical record review.
Methods. All children
2 years old admitted to the
pediatric service with a primary discharge diagnosis of pyelonephritis
or UTI were reviewed for 65 consecutive months. Patients with previous
UTI, known urologic problems, or immunodeficiency were excluded. Only patients with an admitting temperature
38°C and those who met standard culture criteria were studied. Temperatures are not recorded hourly on the inpatient unit; therefore, they were assigned to blocks
of time. Nonresponders were defined as those above the 90th percentile
for the time to defervesce. Nonresponders were then compared with the
balance of the study patients, termed responders.
Results. Of 288 patients studied, the median age was 5.6 months (interquartile range: 1.3-7.9 months old). Median admission
temperature was 39.3°C (interquartile range: 38.5°C-40.1°C).
Median time to defervesce ranged in the time block 13 to 16 hours.
Sixty-eight percent were afebrile by 24 hours and 89% by 48 hours.
Thirty-one patients had fever >48 hours (nonresponders). Nonresponders
were older than responders (9.4 vs 4.1 months old) but had
similar initial temperatures (39.8 vs 39.2°C), white blood cell
counts (18.4 vs 17.1 ×1000/mm3), and band counts (1.4 vs
1.2 ×1000/mm3). Nonresponders had similar urinalyses with
regard to leukocyte esterase positive (23/29 vs 211/246),
nitrite-positive (8/28 vs 88/221], and the number of patients with
"too numerous to count" white blood cell counts per high power
field (12/28 vs 77/220). Nonresponders were as likely as responders to
have bacteremia (3/31 vs 21/256), hydronephrosis by renal ultrasound
(1/31 vs 12/232), and significant vesicoureteral reflux (more than or
equal to grade 3; 5/26 vs 30/219). Eschericia coli was
the pathogen in cultures of 28 of 31 (nonresponders) and 225 of 257 (responders) cultures. The number of cultures with
100 colony-forming
units/mL was similar (25/31 nonresponders vs 206/257 responders).
Repeat urine cultures were performed in 93% of patients during the
admission; all culture results were negative. No renal abscesses or
pyo-hydronephrosis was diagnosed.
Conclusions. Eighty-nine percent of young children with febrile UTIs were afebrile within 48 hours of initiating parenteral antibiotics. The patients who took longer than 48 hours to defervesce were clinically similar to those whose fevers responded faster to therapy. If antibiotic sensitivities are known, additional diagnostic studies or prolonged hospitalizations may not be justified solely based on persistent fever beyond 48 hours of therapy. Key words: urinary tract infection, pyelonephritis, pediatric, antibiotic, fever.
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