Silent Burden of Urinary Tract Infections in Intermittent Catheter Users with Neurological Disorders: A Scoping Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Data Extraction and Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Study Characteristics
3.3. Epidemiological Burden of UTIs
3.3.1. SCI Patients
3.3.2. Impact of Catheter Type, Hygiene, and Education
3.3.3. Multiple Sclerosis Patients
3.4. Risk Factors
4. Discussion
4.1. Main Findings of This Study
4.2. What Is Already Known on This Topic
4.3. What This Study Adds
4.4. Strengths and Limitations of This Study
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| P (population): | Adults (≥18 years) with NLUTD due to SCI or MS who use IC. |
| I (intervention): | Intermittent catheterization (particularly clean intermittent catheterization, CIC), and exposure to various user-dependent, technique-related, and catheter-specific factors. |
| C (comparator): | The comparison varies by study and includes the absence of a specific risk factor or the use of an alternative catheterization practice (e.g., single-use vs. reusable, self-IC vs. assisted-IC, and educated caregiver vs. standard care). |
| O (outcomes): |
|
| First Author. Year and Country | Study Design | Underlying Pathology | Target Population | IC Type/Managment | IC Frequency | IC Related Burden of Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen S.F., 2014 Taiwan [15] | Cross-sectional survey | SCI | Clean Intermittent Catheterization (CIC) group: 163 patients (18.2) | CIC/Self-CIC | N.A. | Prevalence of (Patient Reported Urinary Tract Infections) PRUTIs during the previous 3 years: 31 patients (41.3% of the CIC group that underwent urinalysis) |
| Yıldız N., 2014 Turkey [14] | Cross-sectional observational study | SCI | IC group: 243 M: 178 (73.2%) F: 65 (26.8%) | Aseptic IC | N.A. | Prevalence of UTIs related to aseptic IC: 51 patients (21.9% of the observed aseptic IC users) |
| Yilmaz B., 2014 Turkey [3] | Retrospective observational study | Acute SCI: 88 patients Chronic SCI: 119 patients | CIC group: 207 | CIC | N.A. | UTIs prevalence: Symptomatic UTIs: 76/207 patients (36.7%) |
| Krassioukov A., 2015 Canada [39] | Cross-sectional observational study | SCI | TOT: 61 patients Mean Age (SD): 35 ± 7.7 M: 53 (87%) F: 8 (13%) | CIC | Mean number of ICs: 6 ± 2 times per day (ranging from 1 to 10 per day). Re-use (19 patients). Mean number of IC using: 34 ± 50 times | UTI frequency: Single use IC: 1 ± 1 UTI/year Re-use IC: 4 ± 3 UTI/year UTIs in developing countries: 3.5 ± 2.8/year UTIs in developed countries: 1.6 ± 2/year |
| Rabadi M.H., 2015 USA [30] | Retrospective observational study | SCI with NB | CIC group: 40 patients | CIC | N.A. | UTI prevalence: 14 (35.0%) |
| Mukai S., 2016 Japan [28] | Retrospective observational study | SCI | TOT: 259 patients Median age: 47 (range 12–90 years) M: 220 (84.9%) F: 39 (15.1%) | CIC | Median number of CIC per day: 7 (Range: 1–20) | UTI prevalence: 129 (49.8%) Febrile UTIs during follow-up period: 67 (25.8%) |
| Alavinia S.M., 2017 Canada [20] | Prospective observational study | Subacute SCI | CIC group 40 (72.70%) | Self CIC: 25 Assisted CIC: 15 | N.A. | UTI incidence in CIC: 26 (65.0%) |
| Stillman M.D., 2018 USA [13] | Secondary analysis of data from a prospective clinical trial | Traumatic SCI | IC group At baseline: 35 3 months: 31 6 months: 35 9 months: 38 12 months: 39 | IC | N.A. | UTI incidence rate: At baseline: IC: 13/35 (37%) 3 months: IC: 19/31 (61%) 6 months: IC: 16/35 (46%) 9 months: IC: 13/38 (34%) 12 months: IC: 12/39 (31%) |
| Crescenze I., 2019 USA [22] | Prospective cohort study | SCI | CIC: 753 Non-self: 82 (10.9%) M: 67.1% F: 32.9% Mean age 43.2 (18–86) | Self CIC:671 Assisted CIC: 82 (10.9%) | Mean duration of CIC 9.5 years (0–44) | PRUTI reported per year >4: 209 patients (27.8%) |
| McClurg D., 2019 UK [10] | Three-part mixed-method study: Prospective observational study, qualitative interviews, retrospective survey. | MS | TOT CIC: 56 Continuers group (at 1 year follow up): 43 patients M: 12 (28%) F: 31 (72%) Mean Age (SD): 49.9 (12.5) Discontinuers: 13 patients M: 2 (15%) F: 11 (85%) Mean Age (SD): 51.3 (10.1) | Self-CIC | N.A. | Prevalence At baseline: Discontinuers (n = 13) reported UTIs: 3 (23%) Continuers (n = 43) reported UTIs: 22 (51%) At 8 months: Discontinuers: No UTI: 6 (46%) Same number of UTIs: 0 (0%) Increased UTIs: 7 (54%) Decreased UTIs: 0 (0%) Continuers: No UTIs: 6 (46%) Same number of UTIs: 11 (26%) Increased UTIs: 7 (54%) Decreased UTIs reported: 3 (7%) |
| Huang X. 2019 China [33] | Randomized clinical trial | SCI with NB | TOT: 80 patients M: 49 F: 31 Quality Control Circle group: 40 patients M: 25 F: 15 Mean Age (SD): 56.7 ± 4.3 years CG: 40 patients M: 24 F: 16 Mean (SD): 57.3 ± 4.8 Age years | Self-CIC | N.A. | UTI incidence Quality Control Circle Group: 4 patients (10%) Control Group: 13 patients (32.5%) |
| Roth J.D. 2019 USA [21] | Retrospective survey | SCI | CIC group: 753 Mean age (SD): 43.7 (13.1) years M: 504 (66.9%) | CIC | Mean number of daily catheterizations: 5.94 (SD 1.81). | PRUTI during the previous year: 0: 172 (22.8%) 1–3: 372 (49.4%) 4–6: 117 (15.5%) 6: 92 (12.2%) Adjusted odds of increased UTI frequency 3.42 (2.25–5.18) for CIC (reference spontaneous voiding) |
| Anderson C.E., 2019 Switzerland [23] | Prospective cohort study | SCI | IC group: 73 (19.8%) | Assisted-IC: 41 patients (11.1%) Self-IC: 32 patients (8.7%) | N.A. | UTI prevalence 28 days after admission Assisted IC Patients with 1 UTI: 12/41 patients (29.3%) Patients with ≥2 UTIs: 13/41 (31.7%) Self-IC Patients with 1 UTI: 8/32 (25.0%) Patients with ≥2 UTIs: 6/32 (18.8%) UTIs IR and IRR (reference Spontaneous Voiding): IC-assisted: Crude IR per 100 person-days (95% CI): 0.68 (0.52–0.90) Unadjusted IRR (95% CI): 6.16 (3.04–12.50) Adjusted IRR (95% CI): 6.05 (2.63–13.94) IC-self: Crude IR per 100 person-days (95% CI): 0.53 (0.39–0.71) Unadjusted IRR (95% CI): 4.50 (2.25–9.01) Adjusted IRR (95% CI): 5.16 (2.31–11.52) |
| Hennessey D., 2019 Australia [24] | Prospective observational study | SCI | ISC group: 45 | ISC | N.A. | UTIs/1000 days: 6.84 |
| Farrelly E., 2020 Sweden [26] | Prospective cohort study | Post-traumatic SCI | CIC group: 157 (38%) | CIC | N.A. | Mean number of UTIs during the previous year: 2.5 UTIs/year: 0: 58 (36.9%) 1–3: 57 (36.3%) 4–6: 26 (16.5%) >6: 16 (10.2%) |
| Nade E.S. 2020 Tanzania [16] | Cross-sectional pilot study | SCI | CIC patients: 23 | Self -IC: 8 (16%). Family member assisted IC: 15 (31.3%) | N.A. | Incidence of Febrile UTIs: 9 (39.2% of all patients performing CIC) Inpatients: 4 (25%) Outpatients: 5 (71%). |
| Patel D.P., 2020 USA [11] | Cross-sectional observational study nested within a registry-based observational study | SCI | TOT: 176 patients M: 110 (63%) F: 66 (37%) Mean age (SD): 45.3 (12.8) years | CIC | N.A. | PRUTI frequency during previous year (in 176 patients that discontinued CIC): 0: 17 (26%) 1–3: 79 patients (45%) ≥4: 60 patients (34%) Hospitalization for UTI during the previous year: 29 (16%) |
| Neyaz O., 2020 India [25] | Prospective observational study | SCI | TOT: 31 patients M: 29 (93%) F: 2 (7%) Mean Age (SD): 28.6 ± 9.2 years | Self-CIC | N.A. | Incidence of Symptomatic UTIs: 2.29 episodes per patient per year |
| Theisen K.M., 2020 USA [27] | Prospective observational study | SCI | CIC group: 780 | CIC | N.A. | PRUTI frequency during previous year: 0: 178 (46%) 1–3: 381 (49%) 4–6: 127 (16.7%) 6: 94 (12.4%) |
| Kim Y., 2021 South Korea [32] | Retrospective descriptive study | SCI | TOT: 964 M: 742 (77.0%) F: 222 (23.0%) Mean Age 46.1 (15.6) | Self CIC: 54 (5.6%) Caregiver assisted CIC: 64 (6.6%) | N.A. | UTI prevalence in Self CIC group: 12 (22.2%) UTI prevalence Caregiver assisted CIC: 13 (20.3%) |
| Walter M., 2021 Canada [17] | Cross sectional survey | SCI | IC group: 109 (84%) | IC | Median duration of IC: 10 years (IQR 6–15, range 1–28). Median frequency of catheterizations per day: 5 (IQR 4.5–6, range 1–10). | PRUTI incidence during previous year: 69 (63% of IC patients) Median number of PRUTIs per year: 1 (IQR 0–2, range 0–12). |
| Berger A., 2022 Multicentric (Germany, Netherlands) [31] | Retrospective Chart Review | SCI | IC patients 23 (31.5%) | Caregiver assisted IC | N.A. | UTI incidence at 3 months follow-up: 42 patients (57.5%) UTI incidence per 100 person-month: 31.46 |
| Chen S.F., 2022 Taiwan [38] | Retrospective observational study | SCI | CIC group: 81 patients | CIC/Self-CIC | N.A. | Recurrent UTI incidence: 57 (70.4%) |
| Xing H., 2023 China [29] | Retrospective Chart review | SCI | TOT 183 patients M: 123 (67.2%) F: 60 (32.8%) Median Age: 49.0 Years (37–59 range) | CIC: 56 (30.6%) Self-CIC: 27 (69.4%) | IC performed 4–6 times/day with disposable catheters | UTI incidence: 44 (24.0%) Occurrence rate of UTI: 1.31 (95% Cis, 0.96–1.77) events per 100 person-days |
| Liu J., 2023 China [18] | Cross-sectional observational study | SCI | CIC group: 623 | CIC | Frequency of CIC use (times per day): <1: 116 (18.6%) 1–6: 478 (76.7%) >6: 29 (4.7%) | Incidence UTIs: 525 (84.3%) Recurrent UTIs: 333 (53.5%) Number of outpatient visits for UTIs:3 (0.4% of total CIC users) Number of hospitalizations for UTIs:12 (1.9%) CIC use < 1/day (N = 116): UTIs: 107 (20.4%) OR (reference 1–6): 1.333 (95% CI: 0.595–2.988, p = 0.485) CIC use 1–6/day (N = 478): UTIs: 391 (74.5%) OR: 1 (Reference) CIC use > 6/day (N = 29): UTIs: 27 (93.1%) OR (reference 1–6): 2.378 (95% CI: 0.532–10.626, p = 0.257) |
| Sekido N. 2023 Japan [19] | Cross Sectional Internet Survey | SCI | ISC group: 247 M: 185 (74.9%) F: 62 (25.1%) Mean Age (SD): 47.8 ± 14.9 years | Reusable silicone catheter: 136 (55.1) Single-use catheter: 111 (44.9) | N.A. | UTI incidence ISC (247) Symptomatic UTI 129 (52.2%) Febrile UTI 82 (33.2%) Hcp-sUTI 96 (38.9%) Re-usable (136) Symptomatic UTI 75 (55.1%) Febrile UTI 46 (33.8%) Hcp-sUTI 58 (42.6%) Single Use (111) Symptomatic UTI 54 (48.6%) Febrile UTI 36 (32.4%) Hcp-sUTI 18 (34.2%) UTI episodes ISC (SD) Symptomatic UTI 2.8 (4.95) Febrile UTI 0.9 (2.14) Hcp-sUTI 1.5 (2.83) Re-usable (SD) Symptomatic UTI 2.8 (4.18) Febrile UTI 0.8 (1.43) Hcp-sUTI 1.5 (2.45) Single use (SD) Symptomatic UTI 2.8 (5.77) Febrile UTI 1.0 (2.77) Hcp-sUTI 1.4 (3.26) |
| Milicevic s., 2024; Serbia [34] | Retrospective study | SCI | TOT: 369 | Self IC: 287 Assisted IC: 72 | N.A. | UTI incidence: 252 (62.7%) Self IC 69 (17.2%) Assisted IC |
| Ali S., 2024; Saudi Arabia [35] | Retrospective cohort study | SCI | TOT: 1000 Gender: M: 87.2% F:12.8% F Mean age: 34.07y (13.19) | 524 (52.4%) hydrophilic coated catheters (HCC), 476 (47.6%) PVC uncoated catheters (PUC) | N.A. | Symptomatic UTI incidence HCC 46.60% PUC 79.40% |
| Luo J., 2024; China [36] | Retrospective Case Control study | SCI | TOT: 84 Control group 40 Observation group 44 | Self-CIC | N.A. | UTI prevalence: Control Group: 20 (50%) Observation Group: 11 (25%) |
| Cheng T.C., 2024; Taiwan [37] | Retrospective cohort study | SCI | TOT: 47 M 38 (80.9%) F 9 (19.1%) Mean age: 47y | CIC | N.A. | UTI incidence per month: 0.03 UTIs/month |
| Study | General Conditions | Intermittent Catheterization | User Compliance/Adherence | Local Urinary Tract Conditions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Krassioukov A., 2015 [39] | - | - | Procedure-related (catheter reuse) | - |
| Mukai S., 2016 [28] | Gender (male); neurological status (ASIA scale C or worse) | - | - | - |
| McClurg D., 2019 [10] | - | - | CIC Compliance (continuation use, discontinuation use) | - |
| Anderson C.E., 2019 [23] | - | - | Hygienic Procedure (intermittent self catheterization, assisted catheterization) | - |
| Kim Y., 2021 [32] | - | Catheter type (indwelling, suprapubic catheters) | - | - |
| Liu J., 2023 [18] | Gender (male); disease duration; urinary incontinence | Change in catheterization method | Difficulty with insertion; infrequent CIC; catheter reuse (borderline) | - |
| Sekido N., 2023 [19] | Catheter type (indwelling catheters) | Procedure-related (catheter reuse) | - | |
| Milicevic S., 2024 [30] | Impaired Bladder Compliance (reflex voiding, and spontaneous voiding) | Catheter type (indwelling catheters) | Hygienic Procedure (intermittent self catheterization, assisted catheterization) | - |
| Ali S., 2024 [35] | - | Catheter type (hydrophilic-coated catheters, PVC catheters) | - | - |
| Luo J., 2024 [36] | - | - | Lack of caregiver education and support | - |
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D’Ambrosio, F.; Pappalardo, C.; Scardigno, A.; Medico, M.D.; Risuleo, P.E.; Orsini, F.; Ricciardi, R.; De Vito, E.; Ricciardi, W.; Calabrò, G.E. Silent Burden of Urinary Tract Infections in Intermittent Catheter Users with Neurological Disorders: A Scoping Review. Diseases 2026, 14, 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases14020058
D’Ambrosio F, Pappalardo C, Scardigno A, Medico MD, Risuleo PE, Orsini F, Ricciardi R, De Vito E, Ricciardi W, Calabrò GE. Silent Burden of Urinary Tract Infections in Intermittent Catheter Users with Neurological Disorders: A Scoping Review. Diseases. 2026; 14(2):58. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases14020058
Chicago/Turabian StyleD’Ambrosio, Floriana, Ciro Pappalardo, Anna Scardigno, Manuel Del Medico, Pietro Eric Risuleo, Francesca Orsini, Roberto Ricciardi, Elisabetta De Vito, Walter Ricciardi, and Giovanna Elisa Calabrò. 2026. "Silent Burden of Urinary Tract Infections in Intermittent Catheter Users with Neurological Disorders: A Scoping Review" Diseases 14, no. 2: 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases14020058
APA StyleD’Ambrosio, F., Pappalardo, C., Scardigno, A., Medico, M. D., Risuleo, P. E., Orsini, F., Ricciardi, R., De Vito, E., Ricciardi, W., & Calabrò, G. E. (2026). Silent Burden of Urinary Tract Infections in Intermittent Catheter Users with Neurological Disorders: A Scoping Review. Diseases, 14(2), 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases14020058

