1. Regional and temporal genotype profiling of Clostridioides difficile in a multi-institutional study in Japan
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Yusaku Sagisaka, Miyako Ishibashi, Daisuke Hosokawa, Hikaru Nakagawa, Shinya Yonogi, Kenta Minami, Youichi Suzuki, Taku Ogawa, Akira Ukimura, Takashi Nakano, Jun Komano, and The C. difficile Molecular Epidemiology Network of Japan
- Subjects
Clostridioides difficile ,Infection ,Molecular epidemiology ,Region-specific genotype ,Cross-regional genotype ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Clostridioides difficile, a cause of healthcare-associated infections, poses a significant global health threat. This multi-institutional retrospective study focuses on epidemic dynamics, emphasizing minor and toxin-negative clinical isolates through high-resolution genotyping. The genotype of the C. difficile clinical isolates during 2005 to 2022 was gathered from 14 hospitals across Japan (N = 982). The total number of unique genotypes was 294. Some genotypes were identified in every hospital (cross-regional genotypes), while others were unique to a specific hospital or those in close geographic proximity (region-specific genotypes). Notably, a hospital located in a sparsely populated prefecture exhibited the highest prevalence of region-specific genotypes. The isolation rate of cross-regional genotypes positively correlated with the human mobility flow. A 6-month interval analysis at a university hospital from 2019 to 2021 revealed a temporal transition of the genotype dominance. The frequent isolation of identical genotypes over a brief timeframe did not always align with the current criteria for defining nosocomial outbreaks. This study highlights the presence of diverse indigenous C. difficile strains in regional environments. The cross-regional strains may have a higher competency to spread in the human community. The longitudinal analysis underscores the need for further investigation into potential nosocomial spread.
- Published
- 2024
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