A fever with no obvious cause
A baby spikes a fever. Parents worry. The doctor looks for a cause. Ears look fine. Throat looks fine. No rash. Breathing is normal.
What now? One of the big possibilities doctors must consider is a urinary tract infection, or UTI. In babies, UTIs can be silent killers. They can reach the kidneys, cause lasting damage, and even spread to the bloodstream.
But UTIs in babies are notoriously tricky to diagnose. Babies cannot tell you where it hurts. Symptoms are vague. The gold standard test, a urine culture, takes days.
In the meantime, doctors need quick clues. The humble urine dipstick is one of them.
UTIs are the most common serious bacterial infection in the first year of life. Up to 5 percent of infants with unexplained fever have a UTI.
Missed UTIs can lead to pyelonephritis (kidney infection). Repeated kidney infections can scar the kidneys. Those scars can cause high blood pressure and kidney problems later in life.
Fast, accurate screening matters. Every minute a UTI goes untreated in a young infant increases risk.
Old way vs. new evidence
Urine dipsticks have been used for decades. But their reliability in babies has been debated. Some studies have suggested they miss too many infections. Others have argued they are good enough.
This study specifically tested dipstick performance in children under one year, including the youngest newborns who have received less attention in prior research.
How it works, in plain English
A urine dipstick is a small strip with color-reacting pads. When dipped in urine, different pads change color based on what is in the fluid.
For UTIs, two pads matter most:
Leukocyte esterase (LE) looks for white blood cell activity. When your immune system fights an infection, white blood cells release this enzyme. A positive LE means white cells are in the urine, hinting at infection.
Nitrites look for a chemical that certain bacteria produce from food compounds in urine. A positive nitrite test strongly suggests bacteria are present.
Picture a basic home smoke detector. LE is like a heat sensor. It picks up the smoke and heat of an immune battle. Nitrites are like a smell sensor that only triggers when specific chemicals are in the air. Both can detect fires, but they catch different things.
The study snapshot
Researchers at a single center reviewed 5 years of urine samples from babies aged 0 to 12 months who came to the emergency department with unexplained fever.
They split babies into two age groups: 0 to 3 months and 4 to 12 months. They then compared dipstick results to urine culture, the gold standard.
Here's what they found
Both dipstick markers performed well for ruling in a UTI.
In babies under 3 months:
- Leukocyte esterase: 94 percent specificity (very good at avoiding false positives), 60 percent sensitivity (moderately good at catching infections)
- Nitrites: 99 percent specificity, 25 percent sensitivity
- Positive predictive value for LE: 87 percent
- Positive predictive value for nitrites: 96 percent
In babies 4 to 12 months old, numbers were similar. Specificity for nitrites stayed at 98 percent. If a nitrite test comes back positive, chances are very high that a real UTI is present.
Combining the two markers did not improve performance much.
But here is the catch.
Nitrites have low sensitivity. A negative nitrite does not rule out a UTI. Many babies with real infections test negative for nitrites. That is because the test needs bacteria to sit in the bladder long enough to produce detectable nitrites, and babies pee frequently.
Leukocyte esterase does better at catching cases but is less specific. Some false positives happen.
That is why urine culture still matters. The dipstick can point strongly toward a UTI, but it cannot reliably exclude one.
How the researchers read it
The authors describe dipstick analysis as a reliable bedside test, particularly for ruling in UTIs. Positive nitrites in a baby under 3 months are almost always meaningful.
But they emphasize that urine culture is still the gold standard for confirming a diagnosis. Dipstick is a first step, not the final word.
If your baby has a fever and the doctor does a urine dipstick test:
- A positive nitrite result is a strong signal that antibiotics should probably start, pending culture confirmation
- A positive LE result also raises suspicion, though less definitively
- A negative dipstick does not guarantee no UTI. Follow up with culture if suspicion remains
Make sure urine collection is done properly. In young infants, a clean catch, catheter sample, or suprapubic aspiration (needle into the bladder) gives the most reliable result. Wet-diaper urine is not reliable for diagnosis.
Never skip follow-up if antibiotics are started. Culture results will guide which antibiotic to continue and whether additional imaging is needed.
The limits
This was a single-center retrospective study. Results from one hospital may not apply perfectly everywhere.
The study combined different urine collection methods. Different collection techniques have different accuracy levels.
Sensitivity numbers, especially for nitrites, mean dipsticks alone cannot be relied on to rule out UTI.
Better bedside tests are always needed. Rapid PCR tests for urine are emerging, which can identify specific bacteria within minutes. As costs drop, these may complement or replace some dipstick uses.
For now, dipsticks remain a quick and useful tool in the evaluation of unexplained fever in babies. When combined with thoughtful clinical judgment and confirmatory culture, they help doctors act fast when every hour counts.