Residual urine is a common problem among Intermittent Self Catheter (ISC) users and remains an important risk factor for developing Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs).1 

Urine may contain pathogenic bacteria, which if allowed to remain in the bladder, can multiply and cause a UTI2. This makes complete bladder emptying* key in alleviating the risk of UTI in ISC users.3

 *Complete bladder emptying is defined as <10 mL (NCT05485922, N=42). Individual results may vary.4

How bacterial growth increases the UTI risk / 2.51

Residual urine allows bacteria to grow inside the bladder

The presence of residual urine provides an environment for bacteria to remain in the bladder for a longer period and multiply. 3
Bacteria invade the bladder wall 2
This allows the bacteria to multiply and invade other epithelial cells in the bladder wall. As it increases the risk of UTI, this is a concern with regard to patients’ health. 2

The impact on patients wellbeing

What is the literature on residual urine and UTIs?

While there is no consesus of what is an acceptable level of residual urine, international guidelines recognise the importance of avoiding residual urine:

IDSA practice Guideline7 

There is no standard definition of abnormal residual urine volume, because the association between residual urine volume and UTI is not well established, although studies often define abnormal retention as the presence of >100mL of urine on ≥2 consecutive occasions

French Clinical Practice Guideline8 

We strongly recommend that intermittent catheterisation completely empties the bladder of urine (strong agreement from the outset)” 

The catheter must be long enough to allow complete emptying of the bladder (strong agreement from the outset)” 

EAU Guidelines on Neuro-Urology9 

Incomplete bladder emptying is a serious risk factor for UTI 

Complete bladder emptying is key to lower the risk of UTIs

Based on outcomes reported by Clean Intermittent Catheter (CIC) users, the association between risk factors for urinary tract infections (UTI) in relation to Quality of Life (QoL) and UTIs was investigated in a 2022 study.5

Findings from the study underline the importance of patient reported risk factors and the risk of UTIs, with perception of having an empty bladder being associated with 17% lower risk of UTI.

Relative risks (RR) of UTIs within patient-reported UTI risk factors

Quote

When you have UTIs a few times as a catheter user, you start thinking about what you can do to minimise the risk.

- Flemming Find Madsen