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Presence of multiple Clostridium difficile strains at primary infection is associated with development of recurrent disease

Recurrence of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) places a major burden on the healthcare system. Previous studies have suggested that specific C. difficile strains, or ribotypes, are associated with severe disease and/or recurrence. However, in some patients a new strain is detected in subsequent...

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Published in:Anaerobe 2018-10, Vol.53, p.74-81
Main Authors: Seekatz, Anna M., Wolfrum, Emily, DeWald, Christopher M., Putler, Rosemary K.B., Vendrov, Kimberly C., Rao, Krishna, Young, Vincent B.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Recurrence of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) places a major burden on the healthcare system. Previous studies have suggested that specific C. difficile strains, or ribotypes, are associated with severe disease and/or recurrence. However, in some patients a new strain is detected in subsequent infections, complicating longitudinal studies focused on strain differences that may contribute to disease outcome. We examined ribotype composition over time in patients who did or did not develop recurrence to examine infection with multiple C. difficile ribotypes (mixed infection), during the course of infection. Using a retrospective patient cohort, we isolated and ribotyped a median of 36 C. difficile colonies from 61 patients (105 total samples) at initial infection, recurrence (a second case of CDI within 15–56 days of initial infection), and reinfection (a second case of CDI after 56 days of initial infection). We observed mixed infection in 78.6% of samples at initial infection in patients who went on to develop recurrence compared to 18.1% of patients who did not, and mixed infection remained associated with subsequent recurrence after adjusting for gender and prior antibiotic exposure (OR 3.5, 95% CI 1.3–9.4, P = .015). In patients who were sampled longitudinally (44 consecutive events in 32 patients), the dominant ribotype changed in 31.8% of consecutive samples and the newly dominant ribotype was not detected in prior samples from that patient. Our results suggest that mixed C. difficile infection is more prevalent than previously demonstrated and potentially a marker of susceptibility to recurrence. •More than one Clostridium difficile strain (mixed infection) at primary C. difficile infection diagnosis was associated with the development of recurrent disease.•A high number (40%) of individuals developed recurrence or reinfection with a new strain of C. difficile.•Newly infecting strains were not detected in prior samples, independent of mixed infection status.
ISSN:1075-9964
1095-8274
DOI:10.1016/j.anaerobe.2018.05.017