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Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile infection burden in Japan: A multicenter prospective study

Authors :
Makoto Nakamura
Kuniko Yokote
Hidetaka Kitazono
Yasuaki Tagashira
Kimberly A. Reske
Sayuri Morita
Kayoko Toimoto
Daisuke Suzuki
Tatsuyuki Watanabe
Takuya Watanabe
Hideaki Kato
Nobuaki Mori
Erik R. Dubberke
Akiko Higuchi
Takao Toyokawa
Fumi Masumoto
Cedric Mahé
Kei Moriya
Hitoshi Honda
Tetsuya Kikuchi
Tatsuya Bando
Saeko Kashiwagura
Kei Kasahara
Margaret A. Olsen
Junko Ogawa
Hisashi Kume
Yousuke Shimizu
Katsuyuki Kojima
Hideaki Ishikawa
Tadashi Fukuda
Hideo Morikawa
Kayoko Tadera
Izumi Yokomaku
Mitsutoshi Senoh
Seigo Kitada
Hiroko Horiuchi
Hiroko Miyazato
Haruko Saito
Masahisa Honda
Mika Nakama
Hiroshi Chiba
Haru Kato
Harumi Tominaga
Jun-ichi Yoshida
Ichiro Yoshikawa
Yasuhiro Norisue
Saori Ishiguro
Naoto Hosokawa
Source :
Anaerobe. 60:102011
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile is the leading cause of healthcare-associated infectious diarrhea in the developed world. Retrospective studies have shown a lower incidence of C. difficile infection (CDI) in Japan than in Europe or North America. Prospective studies are needed to determine if this is due lack of testing for C. difficile or a true difference in CDI epidemiology. A prospective cohort study of CDI was conducted from May 2014 to May 2015 at 12 medical facilities (20 wards) in Japan. Patients with at least three diarrheal bowel movements (Bristol stool grade 6–7) in the preceding 24 h were enrolled. CDI was defined by positive result on enzyme immunoassay for toxins A/B, nucleic acid amplification test for the toxin B gene or toxigenic culture. C. difficile isolates were subjected to PCR-ribotyping (RT), slpA-sequence typing (slpA-ST), and antimicrobial susceptibility testing. The overall incidence of CDI was 7.4/10,000 patient-days (PD). The incidence was highest in the five ICU wards (22.2 CDI/10,000 PD; range: 13.9–75.5/10,000 PD). The testing frequency and CDI incidence rate were highly correlated (R2 = 0.91). Of the 146 isolates, RT018/018″ was dominant (29%), followed by types 014 (23%), 002 (12%), and 369 (11%). Among the 15 non-ICU wards, two had high CDI incidence rates (13.0 and 15.9 CDI/10,000 PD), with clusters of RT018/slpA-ST smz-02 and 018”/smz-01, respectively. Three non-RT027 or 078 binary toxin-positive isolates were found. All RT018/018” isolates were resistant to moxifloxacin, gatifloxacin, clindamycin, and erythromycin. This study identified a higher CDI incidence in Japanese hospitals than previously reported by actively identifying and testing patients with clinically significant diarrhea. This suggests numerous patients with CDI are being overlooked due to inadequate diagnostic testing in Japan.

Details

ISSN :
10759964
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anaerobe
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8b007396237c329c61371978a71b3b6d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anaerobe.2019.03.007