Article Synopsis

  • Urinary catheters frequently lead to infections in hospitals, and understanding bacterial colonization is crucial for mitigating these risks.
  • A new mathematical model integrates population dynamics and fluid dynamics to explain how bacteria migrate on catheters and spread into the bladder.
  • The model indicates that different factors influence infection risks for long-term and short-term catheter usage, suggesting tailored management strategies, such as increasing fluid intake for long-term users and utilizing antimicrobial coatings for short-term users.

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Article Abstract

Urinary catheters are used extensively in hospitals and long-term care and they are highly prone to infection. Understanding the pathways by which bacteria colonise a urinary catheter could guide strategies to mitigate infection, but quantitative models for this colonisation process are lacking. Here we present a mathematical model for bacterial colonisation of a urinary catheter that integrates population dynamics and fluid dynamics. The model describes bacteria migrating up the outside surface of the catheter, spreading into the bladder and being swept through the catheter lumen. Computer simulations of the model reveal that clinical outcomes for long-term versus short-term catheterisation are controlled by different factors: the rate of urine production by the kidneys as opposed to urethral length, catheter surface properties and bacterial motility. Our work may help explain variable susceptibility to catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) among individuals and the mixed success of antimicrobial surface coatings. Our model suggests that for long-term catheterised patients, increasing fluid intake or reducing residual urine volume in the bladder may help prevent infection, while antimicrobial surface coatings are predicted to be effective only for short-term catheterised patients. Therefore, different catheter management strategies could be rationally targeted to long-term vs short-term catheterised patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12033313PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-59161-yDOI Listing

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