Dose | Duration | Comment | |
First-line options | |||
Nitrofurantoin monohydrate/macrocrystals (Macrobid)* | 100 mg orally twice daily | Females: 5 days¶ Males: 7 days |
|
Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazoleΔ | One double-strength tablet (160 mg/800 mg) orally twice daily | Females: 3 days¶ Males: 7 days |
|
Fosfomycin | 3 g of powder mixed in water and administered orally | Single dose¶ |
|
Pivmecillinam | 400 mg orally three times daily | Females: 3 to 5 days¶ Males: 7 days |
|
Alternatives: Other beta-lactams | |||
Amoxicillin-clavulanate | 500 mg orally twice daily | Females: 5 to 7 days¶ Males: 7 days |
|
Cefadroxil | 500 mg orally twice daily | Females: 5 to 7 days¶ Males: 7 days | |
Cefpodoxime | 100 mg orally twice daily | Females: 5 to 7 days¶ Males: 7 days | |
Cephalexin | 500 mg orally twice daily◊ | Females: 5 to 7 days¶ Males: 7 days | |
Cefdinir | 300 mg orally twice daily | Females: 5 to 7 days¶ Males: 7 days |
|
Alternatives: Fluoroquinolones | |||
Ciprofloxacin | 250 mg orally twice daily or 500 mg extended release orally once daily | Females: 3 days¶ Males: 5 days |
|
Levofloxacin | 250 mg orally once daily | Females: 3 days¶ Males: 5 days |
|
These options for oral antimicrobial therapy of acute simple cystitis apply to adults and adolescents of all ages. Doses listed are for individuals with normal kidney function; dose adjustments may be needed for individuals with kidney impairment.
First-line options strike a favorable balance between efficacy and adverse effects (including the risk of selecting for resistant organisms). The choice among them should be individualized to patient circumstances (allergy, tolerability, expected adherence), local community resistance prevalence, availability, cost, and patient and provider threshold for failure. If the patient has taken one of the agents in the preceding three months, a different one should be selected. Beta-lactams are second-line agents because they are less effective and have more potential adverse effects. Although fluoroquinolones are very effective, associated adverse effects and increasing resistance rates mitigate their utility; we only use them if other agents cannot be used or in males with concern for possible prostatitis.CrCl: creatinine clearance; MDR: multidrug resistant.
* Nitrofurantoin is also available as nitrofurantoin macrocrystals (Macrodantin), which is dosed differently. Refer to the Lexicomp drug information monograph for nitrofurantoin included within UpToDate.
¶ For females with urinary tract abnormalities, immunocompromising conditions, or poorly controlled diabetes mellitus, it is reasonable to use a longer duration of therapy (eg, 7 days). If a longer duration of fosfomycin is needed (ie, more than a single dose), additional doses are administered every 2 to 3 days for up to 3 doses.
Δ Trimethoprim 100 mg orally twice daily for 3 days is a potential option for individuals who have a sulfonamide (but not trimethoprim) allergy if regional prevalence of resistance is known to be <20%.
◊ Cephalexin can also be dosed at 250 mg orally every 6 hours.
§ For males who have more severe cystitis symptoms or concern about early involvement of the prostate (eg, recurrent UTI with the same pathogen, equivocal prostatic tenderness), we use higher doses of fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin 500 mg orally twice daily or 1000 mg extended release once daily, or levofloxacin 750 mg orally once daily).آیا می خواهید مدیلیب را به صفحه اصلی خود اضافه کنید؟