Validation and generalizability of an asymptomatic bacteriuria metric in critical access hospitals

Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2024 Dec 16:1-6. doi: 10.1017/ice.2024.206. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Inappropriate diagnosis and treatment of urinary tract infections (UTIs) contribute to antibiotic overuse. The Inappropriate Diagnosis of UTI (ID-UTI) measure uses a standard definition of asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) and was validated in large hospitals. Critical access hospitals (CAHs) have different resources which may make ASB stewardship challenging. To address this inequity, we adapted the ID-UTI metric for use in CAHs and assessed the adapted measure's feasibility, validity, and reliability.

Design: Retrospective observational study.

Participants: 10 CAHs.

Methods: From October 2022 to July 2023, CAHs submitted clinical information for adults admitted or discharged from the emergency department who received antibiotics for a positive urine culture. Feasibility of case submission was assessed as the number of CAHs achieving the goal of 59 cases. Validity (sensitivity/specificity) and reliability of the ID-UTI definition were assessed by dual-physician review of a random sample of submitted cases.

Results: Among 10 CAHs able to participate throughout the study period, only 40% (4/10) submitted >59 cases (goal); an additional 3 submitted >35 cases (secondary goal). Per the ID-UTI metric, 28% (16/58) of cases were ASB. Compared to physician review, the ID-UTI metric had 100% specificity (ie all cases called ASB were ASB on clinical review) but poor sensitivity (48.5%; ie did not identify all ASB cases). Measure reliability was high (93% [54/58] agreement).

Conclusions: Similar to measure performance in non-CAHs, the ID-UTI measure had high reliability and specificity-all cases identified as ASB were considered ASB-but poor sensitivity. Though feasible for a subset of CAHs, barriers remain.