Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Women's and Children's Health, University of Padova, via Giustiniani, 3, 35128, Padova, Italy.
Pediatric Emergency Unit, Department of Pediatrics, Rio Hortega Universitary Hospital, Valladolid, Spain.
Eur J Pediatr. 2019 Oct;178(10):1577-1587. doi: 10.1007/s00431-019-03442-4. Epub 2019 Aug 31.
Urinary tract infections, the most common severe bacterial infections in young infants, may be associated with co-existing meningitis. There is no consensus on when to perform a lumbar puncture in these infants. Our aim was to quantify the frequency of co-existing bacterial meningitis in febrile young infants acutely assessed for presumed urinary tract infections. We systematically reviewed PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library for studies including infants ≤ 3 months with suspected/confirmed urinary tract infections, who underwent a lumbar puncture. Two investigators independently reviewed articles for inclusion and extracted relevant data. Our outcomes were culture-confirmed meningitis and identification of low-/high-risk criteria of meningitis. Overall 20/2079 studies, including 4191 infants, met inclusion criteria. A total of 11 infants had bacterial meningitis (frequency between 0 and 2.1% across studies) and were mostly neonates. Of 253 infants meeting the low-risk criteria (well-appearing, age > 21 days, procalcitonin ≤ 0.5 ng/ml, and C reactive protein ≤ 20 mg/L) none developed meningitis, but only 15 underwent lumbar puncture.Conclusion: Co-existing bacterial meningitis in febrile young infants with urinary tract infection is rare. In those meeting low-risk criteria, a lumbar puncture may not be indicated. A case by case assessment should be made in infants not meeting low-risk criteria.Trial registration: CRD42018105339 What is known: • When caring for febrile infants ≤ 3 months with urinary tract infections, clinicians may have uncertainty on whether to perform a lumbar puncture (LP) for possible co-existing meningitis What is new: • An up-to-date systematic review of 20 studies found the frequency of co-existing meningitis in this population to be between 0 and 2.1% • Despite limited data, an LP may not be indicated in infants meeting low-risk criteria (being well-appearing, age > 21 days, procalcitonin ≤ 0.5 ng/ml, C reactive protein ≤ 20 mg/L). Ill-appearance and neonatal age appear to be significant risk factors of co-existing meningitis.
尿路感染是婴幼儿最常见的严重细菌感染之一,可能与并存的脑膜炎有关。目前对于何时对这些婴儿进行腰椎穿刺尚无共识。我们的目的是量化急性评估疑似尿路感染的发热婴幼儿中并存细菌性脑膜炎的频率。我们系统地检索了 PubMed、EMBASE 和 Cochrane 图书馆,以获取包括≤3 个月婴儿的研究,这些婴儿患有疑似/确诊的尿路感染,并接受了腰椎穿刺。两名调查员独立审查文章以确定纳入标准并提取相关数据。我们的结局是培养证实的脑膜炎和确定脑膜炎的低/高风险标准。共有 20/2079 项研究,包括 4191 名婴儿,符合纳入标准。共有 11 名婴儿患有细菌性脑膜炎(各研究中的发生率为 0 至 2.1%),且大多为新生儿。在 253 名符合低危标准的婴儿中(表现良好,年龄>21 天,降钙素原≤0.5ng/ml,C 反应蛋白≤20mg/L),无一人发生脑膜炎,但只有 15 人接受了腰椎穿刺。结论:尿路感染伴发热的婴幼儿中并存细菌性脑膜炎罕见。在符合低危标准的患者中,可能不需要进行腰椎穿刺。对于不符合低危标准的患者,应逐个评估。
CRD42018105339 已知内容:• 在照顾患有尿路感染的≤3 个月发热婴儿时,临床医生可能对是否进行腰椎穿刺(LP)以排除可能并存的脑膜炎存在不确定性。新内容:• 对 20 项研究的最新系统综述发现,该人群中并存脑膜炎的频率为 0 至 2.1%。• 尽管数据有限,但在符合低危标准的婴儿中,LP 可能不是必需的(表现良好,年龄>21 天,降钙素原≤0.5ng/ml,C 反应蛋白≤20mg/L)。表现不佳和新生儿年龄似乎是并存脑膜炎的重要危险因素。