复发性尿路感染与 2 型糖尿病:一项主要针对女性的系统性研究

Sara B. Papp, Philippe E. Zimmern
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2 型糖尿病被认为是复发性尿路感染的一个危险因素。本综述研究了目前关于 2 型糖尿病患者(主要是女性)复发性尿路感染的发病率、细菌菌株、风险因素、治疗方法和结果的知识。我们采用 Cochrane 和系统综述和 Meta 分析首选报告项目标准,在 PubMed、OVID Embase 和 Cochrane Library 数据库中对从开始到 2022 年 6 月的所有英文文章进行了系统综述。对参考文献进行了交叉审查,以获取更多文章。收集的数据描述了复发性尿路感染的发病率、特征和处理方法。对所有研究进行了偏倚风险评估。在3342篇已确定的文章中,有597篇符合初步研究标准。经过全文审阅,来自 10 个国家的 15 项研究被纳入其中。四项研究发现,糖尿病患者的尿路感染复发率高于非糖尿病患者,而其他研究则报告了 23.4% 至 37% 的复发率。五项研究中有四项发现糖尿病是复发性尿路感染的风险因素。大肠杆菌是最常见的致病病原体。抗生素处方的结果各不相同;但多项研究确定,治疗时间较长(≥ 5 天)与复发率较低并无关联。偏倚风险评估发现,最常见的研究弱点是混杂变量的识别。该综述涉及多个子课题,几乎没有全面或可推广的结果,这表明需要就如何更好地评估和管理2型糖尿病女性患者的复发性尿路感染开展更多研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Recurrent Urinary tract infections and type 2 diabetes mellitus: a systematic review predominantly in women
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is considered a risk factor for developing recurrent urinary tract infections. This review examined current knowledge on the incidence rates, bacterial strains, risk factors, treatments, and outcomes of recurrent urinary tract infections in type 2 diabetes, predominantly in women.A systematic review was conducted for all English language articles from inception to June 2022 utilizing the Cochrane and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses standards in the databases PubMed, OVID Embase, and Cochrane Library. References were cross-examined for further articles. Data collected described the prevalence, characteristics, and management of recurrent urinary tract infections. Risk of bias assessments were performed for all studies.From 3342 identified articles, 597 met initial study criteria. Fifteen studies from 10 countries were included after full-text reviews. Four studies found higher recurrent urinary tract infection rates in diabetics versus non-diabetics meanwhile others reported recurrence rates from 23.4% to 37%. Four of five studies found diabetes to be a risk factor for recurrent urinary tract infection. E. coli was the most frequent causative pathogen. Antibiotic prescription results varied; however, multiple studies determined that longer treatment (≥ 5 days) did not correlate with lower recurrence rates. Risk of bias assessments found the most frequent study weakness to be identification of confounding variables.This review covered multiple subtopics, with few comprehensive or generalizable results, suggesting a need for more research on how recurrent urinary tract infections can be better evaluated and managed in women with type 2 diabetes.
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