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  3. Guidelines for the Prevention, Diagnosis, and Management of Urinary Tract Infections in Pediatrics and Adults: A WikiGuidelines Group Consensus Statement.
 

Guidelines for the Prevention, Diagnosis, and Management of Urinary Tract Infections in Pediatrics and Adults: A WikiGuidelines Group Consensus Statement.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/78614
Date of Publication
November 4, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Infectiolog...

Author
Nelson, Zachary
Tarik Aslan, Abdullah
Beahm, Nathan P
Blyth, Michelle
Cappiello, Matthew
Casaus, Danielle
Dominguez, Fernando
Egbert, Susan
Hanretty, Alexandra
Khadem, Tina
Olney, Katie
Abdul-Azim, Ahmed
Aggrey, Gloria
Anderson, Daniel T
Barosa, Mariana
Bosco, Michael
Chahine, Elias B
Chowdhury, Souradeep
Christensen, Alyssa
de Lima Corvino, Daniela
Fitzpatrick, Margaret
Fleece, Molly
Footer, Brent
Fox, Emily
Ghanem, Bassam
Hamilton, Fergus
Hayes, Justin
Jegorovic, Boris
Jent, Philipp
Clinic of Infectiology
Jimenez-Juarez, Rodolfo Norberto
Joseph, Annie
Kang, Minji
Kludjian, Geena
Kurz, Sarah
Lee, Rachael A
Lee, Todd C
Li, Timothy
Maraolo, Alberto Enrico
Maximos, Mira
McDonald, Emily G
Mehta, Dhara
Moore, Justin William
Nguyen, Cynthia T
Papan, Cihan
Ravindra, Akshatha
Spellberg, Brad
Taylor, Robert
Thumann, Alexis
Tong, Steven Y C
Veve, Michael
Wilson, James
Yassin, Arsheena
Zafonte, Veronica
Mena Lora, Alfredo J
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Jama Network Open
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2574-3805
Publisher
American Medical Association
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.44495
PubMed ID
39495518
Description
Importance
Traditional approaches to practice guidelines frequently result in dissociation between strength of recommendation and quality of evidence.Objective
To create a clinical guideline for the diagnosis and management of urinary tract infections that addresses the gap between the evidence and recommendation strength.Evidence Review
This consensus statement and systematic review applied an approach previously established by the WikiGuidelines Group to construct collaborative clinical guidelines. In May 2023, new and existing members were solicited for questions on urinary tract infection prevention, diagnosis, and management. For each topic, literature searches were conducted up until early 2024 in any language. Evidence was reported according to the WikiGuidelines charter: clear recommendations were established only when reproducible, prospective, controlled studies provided hypothesis-confirming evidence. In the absence of such data, clinical reviews were developed discussing the available literature and associated risks and benefits of various approaches.Findings
A total of 54 members representing 12 countries reviewed 914 articles and submitted information relevant to 5 sections: prophylaxis and prevention (7 questions), diagnosis and diagnostic stewardship (7 questions), empirical treatment (3 questions), definitive treatment and antimicrobial stewardship (10 questions), and special populations and genitourinary syndromes (10 questions). Of 37 unique questions, a clear recommendation could be provided for 6 questions. In 3 of the remaining questions, a clear recommendation could only be provided for certain aspects of the question. Clinical reviews were generated for the remaining questions and aspects of questions not meeting criteria for a clear recommendation.Conclusions And Relevance
In this consensus statement that applied the WikiGuidelines method for clinical guideline development, the majority of topics relating to prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of urinary tract infections lack high-quality prospective data and clear recommendations could not be made. Randomized clinical trials are underway to address some of these gaps; however further research is of utmost importance to inform true evidence-based, rather than eminence-based practice.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/189708
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nelson_2024_cs_240011_1732219275.30843.pdftextAdobe PDF1.78 MBpublishedOpen
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