Updated guideline recommended for screening of pregnant women
BY Tina Depko, Health Sciences
July 10, 2018
First-trimester screening of pregnant women for asymptomatic bacteriuria, which are higher than normal bacteria levels without symptoms of a bladder infection, is recommended by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care.
A McMaster University faculty member is the first author of the updated guideline, which has been published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ).
“As the data underlying this long-standing screening practice have not been revisited in decades, the task force saw the need for an updated guideline looking at the evidence on potential harms and benefits of screening while considering women’s values and preferences around screening and treatment,” said Ainsley Moore, associate professor of family medicine at McMaster and a family physician.
The current practice in Canada is to screen a urine culture in the first trimester, regardless of whether there are symptoms of a urinary tract infection, and to treat elevated bacteria levels with antibiotics.
The recommendation to continue screening is based only on low-quality evidence that showed a small reduction in kidney infections in pregnant women and in the number of babies with a low birth weight.
The task force calls upon researchers to apply new methods to evaluate such entrenched standards of care to inform the care of pregnant women in Canada.
The task force also recommends that for women with recurrent urinary tract infections, diabetes, kidney issues or sickle cell disease, doctors should follow high-risk screening recommendations from authorities such as the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada.
Kidney infection has been associated with bacterial blood infection, called septicemia, and kidney dysfunction in mothers, and with low birth weight and preterm birth in infants.
This week’s guideline updates a 1994 guideline from the Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination that recommended routine prenatal screening.
In creating the guideline, the task force engaged women aged 21 to 41 years across Canada for their views on the potential benefits and harms of screening. The participants viewed screening as beneficial, although some were concerned about antibiotic use if they screened positive.
“We saw considerable variation in women’s values and preferences when presented with evidence of the benefits and harms,” said Brett Thombs, chair of the task force.
“Women who are interested in small potential reductions in the risk of kidney infection and low birth weight may choose to screen, while others who are more concerned about the potential risks of antibiotics may decide not to screen. It ultimately comes down to patient preferences and a discussion between the clinician and patient to determine these.”
This clinical practice guideline has been endorsed by the Canadian Association of Midwives, the Nurse Practitioner Association of Canada and the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada.
Read the full paper here.