Title of article :
Primary symptomless colonisation by Clostridium difficile and decreased risk of subsequent diarrhoea
Author/Authors :
Janet K Shim، نويسنده , , Stuart Johnson and Michael K. Murray
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، نويسنده , , Matthew H. Samore، نويسنده , , Donna Z Bliss، نويسنده , , Dale N Gerding، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Background
Little is known about whether patients who develop Clostridium-difficile-associated diarrhoea (CDAD) are culture-positive or culture-negative before illness. The most important risk factor is antibiotic exposure. We aimed to find out whether patients identified as primary symptom-free C difficile carriers are at higher risk of developing CDAD than patients who are culture-negative.
Method
We reviewed four longitudinal studies in which 810 patients admitted to hospital were followed up by prospective rectal-swab culture. At least two consecutive weekly cultures were obtained. We calculated the difference in risk of CDAD between colonised and non-colonised patients in each study and combined the results of the four studies in a random-effects model.
Findings
Of 618 non-colonised patients (mean follow-up 1•7 weeks [SD 1•3]), 22 (3•6%) developed CDAD, whereas only two (1•0%) of 192 primary symptom-free carriers (1•5 [1•5]) developed CDAD (pooled risk difference -2•3% [95% CI 0•3–4•3], p=0•021). Of patients who received antibiotics, the risk difference was increased: 22 (4•5%) of 491 noncolonised patients compared with two (1•1%) of 176 colonised patients developed CDAD (-3•2% [0•4–6•0], p=0•024). Of the primary symptom-free C difficile carriers, 95 were colonised with toxigenic strains, 76 with nontoxigenic strains, 12 with both toxigenic and non-toxigenic strains (non-concurrently), and nine with strains of undetermined toxigenicity. Nine of the 12 toxogenic strains of C difficile isolates that cause CDAD were also recovered from stools of symptom-free patients.
Interpretation
Primary symptomless C difficile colonisation is associated with a decreased risk of CDAD. Although the mechanism is unknown, risk reduction is found in colonisation with non-toxigenic and toxigenic strains.
Journal title :
The Lancet
Journal title :
The Lancet