Current treatment guidelines for urinary tract infections (UTIs) in women depend on whether the infection is:
- Uncomplicated cystitis (simple bladder infection)
- Pyelonephritis (kidney infection)
- Complicated UTI
- Pregnancy-associated UTI
- Recurrent UTI
The main current guidance comes from the Infectious Diseases Society of America, American Urological Association, and European Association of Urology. The newest major IDSA update for complicated UTIs was released in 2025.
1. Acute Uncomplicated Cystitis (Most Common)
Healthy nonpregnant women with dysuria/frequency and no fever or flank pain.
First-line antibiotics
Nitrofurantoin (preferred)
- Nitrofurantoin monohydrate/macrocrystals:
- 100 mg PO BID x 5 days
- Avoid if:
- suspected pyelonephritis
- severe renal impairment
- systemic symptoms
TMP-SMX (Bactrim DS)
- 160/800 mg PO BID x 3 days
- Use only if:
- local E. coli resistance <20%
- no sulfa allergy
- no recent TMP-SMX exposure
Fosfomycin
- 3 g PO once
- Useful for resistant organisms/ESBL risk
Pivmecillinam
- Newly FDA approved in US (2024)
- First-line option for uncomplicated cystitis
2. Antibiotics No Longer Preferred First-Line
Fluoroquinolones
Examples:
- ciprofloxacin
- levofloxacin
These work well but are generally reserved because of:
- tendon rupture risk
- neuropathy
- aortic complications
- resistance promotion
Still used for:
- pyelonephritis
- complicated UTI
- resistant organisms
Beta-lactams
Examples:
- amoxicillin-clavulanate
- cefpodoxime
- cephalexin
Usually second-line because efficacy is somewhat lower.
3. When To Suspect Pyelonephritis (Kidney Infection)
Symptoms:
- fever
- flank pain
- nausea/vomiting
- CVA tenderness
- systemic illness
Treatment
Outpatient:
- ciprofloxacin
- levofloxacin
- TMP-SMX if susceptible
Inpatient/severe:
- ceftriaxone
- cefepime
- piperacillin-tazobactam
- carbapenems for ESBL organisms
Nitrofurantoin and fosfomycin should NOT be used for pyelonephritis because they do not penetrate renal tissue adequately.
4. Current Diagnostic Recommendations
In uncomplicated cystitis:
Urinalysis is often sufficient.
Typical findings:
- positive leukocyte esterase
- nitrites
- pyuria
Urine culture recommended when:
- recurrent UTIs
- pregnancy
- complicated infection
- pyelonephritis
- treatment failure
- resistant organisms suspected
5. Asymptomatic Bacteriuria
Do NOT treat unless:
- pregnant
- undergoing invasive urologic procedure
Do NOT routinely treat:
- elderly patients
- diabetics
- catheterized patients
- nursing home residents
6. Pregnancy UTI Guidelines
Pregnancy changes management significantly.
Safe/common options
- cephalexin
- amoxicillin-clavulanate
- fosfomycin
- nitrofurantoin (usually acceptable except near term)
Avoid/Use Caution
TMP-SMX
Avoid especially:
- 1st trimester
- near delivery
Nitrofurantoin
Avoid near term if possible because of neonatal hemolysis risk.
Pregnant women with bacteriuria generally SHOULD be treated even if asymptomatic.
7. Recurrent UTI Guidelines
Defined as:
- ≥2 UTIs in 6 months OR
- ≥3 UTIs in 12 months
Management:
- behavioral modifications
- vaginal estrogen in postmenopausal women
- postcoital prophylaxis
- low-dose suppressive antibiotics in selected patients
Common prophylactic agents:
- nitrofurantoin
- TMP-SMX
- cephalexin
8. Current Resistance/Stewardship Principles
Modern guidelines emphasize:
- shortest effective duration
- avoiding fluoroquinolones when possible
- tailoring therapy to culture results
- considering local antibiograms
Common organism:
- E. coli (~75–95%)
ESBL-producing organisms are increasingly common, especially in recurrent UTIs and healthcare-associated infections.
Practical Quick Reference
Condition
First-line
Simple cystitis
Nitrofurantoin 5 d
Alternative
TMP-SMX 3 d
Resistant risk
Fosfomycin once
Pyelonephritis
Fluoroquinolone or IV beta-lactam
Pregnancy
Cephalexin, Augmentin, fosfomycin
Asymptomatic bacteriuria
Treat only pregnancy/urologic procedure
If you want, I can also give:
- ER/urgent care UTI algorithms
- inpatient pyelonephritis guidelines
- correctional medicine UTI management
- catheter-associated UTI guidelines
- ESBL treatment recommendations
- step-by-step antibiotic selection tables
- current dosing adjusted for renal function
- UTI treatment pearls for boards/MKSAP/ABIM style questions
