Prostatitis

What Is Prostatitis?

Author/s: 
Rebecca Voelker

Prostatitis involves infection, inflammation, or pain in the prostate gland and affects about 9% of men during their lifetime.

What Is Acute Bacterial Prostatitis?
Acute bacterial prostatitis is a urinary tract infection that involves the prostate.1 Patients with acute prostatitis typically have fever, chills, pelvic pain, sudden onset of frequent urination, and pain or burning during urination. Some patients cannot empty their bladder adequately (urinary retention).

Risk factors include medical procedures such as cystoscopy, urethral catheterization, prostate biopsy, urinary obstruction such as benign prostatic hyperplasia and strictures, anal intercourse without condom use, immunosuppression, and certain neurological disorders such as multiple sclerosis, stroke, and spinal cord injury. Digital rectal examination often reveals prostate swelling and tenderness. The diagnosis of acute bacterial prostatitis is made based on symptoms, urinalysis, and urine culture. First-line treatment is 2 to 4 weeks of antibiotics. Men with urinary retention due to a swollen prostate should have a urinary catheter placed to relieve discomfort and to drain the infected urine.

What Is Chronic Bacterial Prostatitis?
Chronic bacterial prostatitis is a persistent bacterial infection of the prostate despite antibiotic therapy. Patients typically do not have fever or chills, and between episodes of infection they may have no symptoms or have persistent pelvic pain and/or lower urinary tract symptoms.

Risk factors include age 50 years or older, prior acute bacterial prostatitis, urethral surgery or catheterization, anal intercourse without condom use, and genitourinary tuberculosis. The diagnosis is made when multiple urine culture samples grow the same bacterial strain during episodes of urinary tract infection. First-line treatment for chronic bacterial prostatitis is at least 4 weeks of oral antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin or levofloxacin.

Prostatitis: A Review

Author/s: 
Benjamin J Borgert, Eric M Wallen, Minh N Pham

Importance Prostatitis is defined as infection, inflammation, or pain of the prostate gland and affects approximately 9.3% of men in their lifetime.

Observations Acute bacterial prostatitis consists of a urinary tract infection (UTI) that includes infection of the prostate, typically associated with fever or chills and caused by gram-negative bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, Klebsiella, or Pseudomonas, in 80% to 97% of cases. First-line therapy for acute prostatitis is broad-spectrum intravenous or oral antibiotics, such as intravenous piperacillin-tazobactam, ceftriaxone, or oral ciprofloxacin, which has a 92% to 97% success rate when prescribed for 2 to 4 weeks for people with febrile UTI and acute prostatitis. Chronic bacterial prostatitis is defined as a persistent bacterial infection of the prostate, typically presenting as recurrent UTIs from the same strain. Up to 74% of chronic bacterial prostatitis diagnoses are due to gram-negative organisms, such as E coli. First-line therapy for chronic bacterial prostatitis is a minimum 4-week course of levofloxacin or ciprofloxacin. Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CP/CPPS) presents as pelvic pain or discomfort for at least 3 months and is associated with urinary symptoms, such as urinary frequency. CP/CPPS is diagnosed when evaluation, including history and physical examination, urine culture, and postvoid residual measurement, does not identify other causes for the symptoms, such as infection, cancer, urinary obstruction, or urinary retention. The National Institutes of Health Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index (NIH-CPSI) measures symptom severity (scale of 0-43), with a 6-point change considered clinically meaningful. First-line oral therapy for CP/CPPS with urinary symptoms is α-blockers (eg, tamsulosin, alfuzosin; ΔNIH-CPSI score difference vs placebo = −10.8 to −4.8). Other oral therapies are associated with modest changes in NIH-CPSI score compared with placebo, including anti-inflammatory drugs (eg, ibuprofen; ΔNIH-CPSI score difference = −2.5 to −1.7), pregabalin (ΔNIH-CPSI score difference = −2.4), and pollen extract (ΔNIH-CPSI score difference = −2.49).

Conclusions and Relevance Prostatitis includes acute bacterial prostatitis, chronic bacterial prostatitis, and CP/CPPS, each of which is diagnosed and treated differently. First-line treatments are broad-spectrum antibiotics for acute bacterial prostatitis (such as piperacillin-tazobactam, ceftriaxone, or ciprofloxacin), at least 4 weeks of fluoroquinolones for chronic bacterial prostatitis, and α-blockers for CP/CPPS with urinary symptoms.

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