Catheter-Associated Candiduria: Aggregates, Microscopy, and CFU Variability
Stephan Steixner, Angelika Bauer, Rosa Bellmann-Weiler, Cornelia Lass-Flörl

TL;DR
This study examines how to better diagnose yeast infections in catheterized patients by comparing different lab methods and evaluating visible urine aggregates.
Contribution
The study introduces a standardized quantitative culture workflow and evaluates its performance against existing methods for diagnosing catheter-associated candiduria.
Findings
Standardized quantitative culture (QM) showed poor agreement with routine semi-quantitative culture (SQM) for CFU detection.
Visible urine aggregates were not reliable indicators of Candida spp. presence.
Intra-patient CFU variability was observed in 17.6% of patients, with 6.8% fluctuating over 10³ CFU/mL.
Abstract
Diagnosis of catheter-associated candiduria is limited by absent colony-forming unit (CFU) thresholds and heterogeneous laboratory workflows, complicating patient management. Within a quality-improvement (QI) initiative we aimed to (1) implement and evaluate a standardised quantitative culture (QM) workflow for catheter urine, (2) compare QM with routine semi-quantitative culture (SQM) for CFU detection and reproducibility, and (3) assess whether visible urine aggregates predict Candida spp. presence. From February 2024 to February 2025, we analysed 222 yeast-positive urine samples from 74 catheterised patients. This pilot combined process standardisation, parallel SQM and QM testing, targeted microscopy of aggregate-containing samples, and species identification by CHROMID® Candida agar and MALDI-TOF. Agreement between methods, intra-patient CFU variability over three daily samples,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrinary Tract Infections Management · Urinary Bladder and Prostate Research · Kidney Stones and Urolithiasis Treatments
