Determinants of multidrug-resistant urinary tract infections: A retrospective cross-sectional study from a tertiary care hospital in southern Bangladesh
Ibrahim Khalil, Abu Sayed, A. K. M. Akbar Kabir, Md. Nurul Alam, S. M. Iqbal Hossain, Rahima Akther Dipa, Md Tanvir Rahman, Delfina Hlashwayo, Julia Robinson

TL;DR
This study identifies risk factors for multidrug-resistant urinary tract infections in a hospital in Bangladesh, highlighting the role of patient gender, healthcare settings, and bacterial species.
Contribution
The study provides context-specific insights into MDR-UTI risk factors in southern Bangladesh, emphasizing healthcare-associated exposure and bacterial species.
Findings
Male patients and those from private medical settings showed significantly higher odds of MDR-UTIs.
Specialized units were strongly associated with MDR-UTI occurrence.
E. coli and Pseudomonas spp. had lower MDR odds compared to Acinetobacter spp.
Abstract
Multidrug resistance (MDR) in urinary tract infections (UTIs) presents a growing global health threat, particularly in resource-limited settings like Bangladesh, where context-specific data remain limited. This retrospective cross-sectional study, conducted from January to December 2023 at a tertiary care hospital in Barishal, Bangladesh, aimed to identify key predictors and risk factors associated with MDR in UTI patients. Of 1,670 urine samples received, 229 with significant bacterial growth were included for antimicrobial susceptibility testing using the disk diffusion method. E. coli (55.9%) was the most common isolate, followed by Pseudomonas spp. (20.5%), Klebsiella spp. (14.8%), and Acinetobacter spp. (8.7%). Of these isolates, 70 (30.56%) were found to be MDR-positive. Multivariate logistic regression revealed that male patients (aOR = 2.2; p < 0.05), samples from specialized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrinary Tract Infections Management · Antibiotic Use and Resistance · Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria
