“…Kidney recipients have the highest risk of developing UTI, with an incidence of 0.45 episodes per 1000 days of transplant and a frequency of 7.3%, followed by kidney-pancreas (5%), heart (2.2%), liver (1.6%) and lung recipients (0.7%) [1]. Other authors described an incidence that ranged from 4% to 75% in renal allograft recipients [2][3][4][5][8][9][10][11]. These differences might be explained by the heterogeneity at establishing the definition of UTI and its clinical manifestations-asymptomatic bacteriuria (AB), acute pyelonephritis (APN), lower UTI, urosepsis, etc., different frequency of routine urine culture testing, different follow-up times, different surgical techniques strategies, diversity in the use of antimicrobial prophylaxis, and in the immunosuppression regimens employed and the retrospective design of most of the studies.…”