P-418. Do We Need Broad Empirical Antibiotics for Upper Urinary Tract Infections Caused by Chromosomal AmpC-Producing Enterobacterales in Children?
Nobuhiro Kanie, Yuto Otsubo, Meiwa Shibata, Yuho Horikoshi

TL;DR
This study found that using initial antibiotics not effective against certain bacteria in children's urinary tract infections did not lead to worse outcomes.
Contribution
The study shows that broad-spectrum antibiotics may not be necessary for initial treatment of AmpC-E UTIs in children.
Findings
No significant difference in time to defervescence between discordant and concordant therapy groups.
30-day culture-confirmed recurrence was low and similar in both groups.
Abstract
The emergence of antimicrobial resistance has complicated management of infections. We investigated whether empirical therapy discordant for chromosomal AmpC-Producing Enterobacterales (AmpC-E) had a clinical impact before switching to definitive therapy in pediatric urinary tract infections (UTIs). A retrospective study was conducted at Tokyo Metropolitan Children’s Medical Center from July 2010 to January 2024. Inclusion criteria were patients aged < 16 years with fever ≥ 38.0℃ and ≥ 10⁴ CFU/mL of AmpC-E in urine cultures. Exclusion criteria were pre-antibiotic defervescence, alternative diagnoses, or polymicrobial growth ( ≥ 3 species). Patients were classified into two groups. The discordant group received initial antibiotics considered ineffective for AmpC-E, such as penicillins or first to third generation cephalosporins. The concordant group received antibiotics generally…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPediatric Urology and Nephrology Studies · Escherichia coli research studies · Urinary Tract Infections Management
