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Clostridium difficile: An Emerging Threat L. Clifford McDonald, MD, FACP, FSHEA Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion Clostridium difficile • Anaerobic spore-forming bacillus • Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD) • Pseudomembranous colitis, toxic megacolon, sepsis, and death • Fecal-oral transmission through contaminated environment and hands of healthcare personnel • Antimicrobial exposure is major risk factor for disease Healthy colon - Acquisition and growth of C. difficile - Suppression of normal flora of the colon • Clindamycin, penicillins, and cephalosporins Pseudomembranous colitis The Historic Impact of CDAD • Rates – Acute care: 3-25/10,000 patient days – Long term care: carriage in 5-7% of patients • Boston, 19981 – Very low attributable mortality – Average of $3,600 excess costs per case – Average of 3.6 extra hospital days 1. Kyne L, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2002;34:346-353. Annual CDAD Rates, Hospitals with >500 Beds, Intensive Care Unit Surveillance Component, NNIS From Archibald LK, et al. J Infect Dis. 2004;189:1585–158. National Estimates of US Short-Stay Hospital Discharges with C. difficile as First-Listed or Any Diagnosis From McDonald LC, et al. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006;12(3):409-15 Rates of US Short-Stay Hospital Discharges with C. difficile Listed as Any Diagnosis by Age From McDonald LC, et al. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006;12(3):409-15 Rates of US Short-Stay Hospital Discharges with C. difficile Listed as Any Diagnosis by Region From McDonald LC, et al. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006;12(3):409-15 Proportion of US Short-Stay Hospital Discharges with C. difficile Listed as Any Diagnosis by Hospital Bed Size From McDonald LC, et al. Emerg Infect Dis. 2006;12(3):409-15 Increasing Severity of CDAD • Pittsburgh, 20002 – Life-threatening disease from 1.6% to 3.2% – 2000-2001: 26 colectomies and 18 deaths • Quebec, 2004 – 30-day attributable mortality 6.9% – 12-month attributable mortality 16.7% 1. 2. 3. Dallal RM, et al. Ann Surg. 2002;235:363-372. Muto C, et al. Infect Control HospEpid. 2005 Pepin J, et al. CMAJ. 2005 CDAD in long term care • Number of patients with CDAD diagnosis transferred to long term care – Doubled between 2000 and 2003 – 2% of all transferred patients • Ohio, 2006 Emerging Infections Network (EIN) Surveys, 2004 2 surveys conducted 6 months apart, 531 unique Infectious Disease Clinician respondents with observations over prior 6 months Layton BA, et al. 15th Annual Scientific Meeting of The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA), April 9-12, 2005; Los Angeles, CA. Potential Reasons for Increased CDAD Incidence and Severity • • • • Changes in underlying host susceptibility Changes in antimicrobial prescribing New strain with increased virulence Changes in infection control practices Acute Care Hospitals with CDAD Outbreaks* Between 2001-2004 2 1 2 1 1 1 *Detected by increases in the number of positive routine clinical laboratory tests for C. difficile. Data from McDonald LC, et al. N Engl J Med. 2005;353:2433-2441. Epidemic (BI/NAP1) Strain From McDonald LC, et al. N Engl J Med. 2005;353:2433-2441. Nonepidemic (Non-BI/NAP1) Strains From McDonald LC, et al. N Engl J Med. 2005;353:2433-2441. Resistance of Current (after 2000) BI/NAP1 Isolates to Clindamycin and Fluoroquinolones Compared with Current Non-BI/NAP1 Isolates and Historic (before 2001) BI/NAP1 Isolates No. (%) Intermediate or Resistant to: Current BI/NAP1 Isolates n=24 (%) Current nonBI/NAP1 Isolates n=24 (%) P-Value for BI/NAP1 vs. NonBI/NAP1 Isolates Historic BI/NAP1 Isolates n=14 (%) P-Value for Current vs. Historic BI/NAP1 Isolates Clindamycin 19 (79) 19 (79) 1.0 10 (71) 0.7 Levofloxacin 24 (100) 23 (96) 1.0 14 (100) 1.0 Gatifloxacin 24 (100) 10 (42) <0.001 0 <0.001 Moxifloxacin 24 (100) 10 (42) <0.001 0 <0.001 From McDonald LC, et al. N Engl J Med. 2005;353:2433-2441. Distribution of Levofloxacin Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations in Current (ie, after 2000) BI/NAP1 and Non-BI/NAP1 Isolates From McDonald LC, et al. N Engl J Med. 2005;353:2433-2441. Increased Toxin A Production in vitro In vitro production of toxins A and B by C. difficile isolates. Median concentration and IQRs are shown. C. difficile strains included 25 toxinotype 0 and 15 NAP1/027 strains (toxinotype III) from various locations. From Warny M, et al. Lancet. 2005;366:1079-1084. Increased Toxin B Production in vitro In vitro production of toxins A and B by C. difficile isolates. Median concentration and IQRs are shown. C. difficile strains included 25 toxinotype 0 and 15 NAP1/027 strains (toxinotype III) from various locations. From Warny M, et al. Lancet. 2005;366:1079-1084. States with the Epidemic Strain of C. difficile Confirmed by CDC and Hines VA labs (N=23), Updated 2/9/2007 DC HI AK PR Lethal hospital bug cases rocket, United Kingdom • Potentially lethal cases of C. difficile “rocketed” from 1990s to 2004 • Cases had increased from 1,000 in 1990 to over 35,000 in 2003 • 44,488 cases of C. difficile in > 65 year olds in 2004. BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4186834.stm BI/NAP1 in the Netherlands, 2006 Kuiper EJ et al. Emerg Infect Dis 2006;12(5):827-830. Challenges • Emergence of a new epidemic strain – Toxinotype III or “BI” by REA • Distinct from “J” strain of 1989-19921 – Binary toxin as a possible virulence factor • In addition to toxins A and B containing – 18 bp deletion in tcdC gene • Could lead to increased toxin production (18-fold for toxin A, 23-fold for toxin B) observed by Warny et al.2 – Increased resistance to fluoroquinolones • Appears responsible for increase in cases • May be responsible for increase in disease severity 1. 2. Johnson S, et al. N Engl J Med. 1999;341:1645-1651. Warny M, et al. Lancet. 2005;366:1079-1084. Recommendations for Hospitals • Hospitals should conduct surveillance for CDAD – Recently proposed surveillance recommendations1 • Early diagnosis and treatment important for reducing severe outcomes and should be emphasized – Subset of epidemic isolates tested: metronidazole susceptible • Strict infection control: CDC Fact Sheet2 – Contact precautions for CDAD patients – An environmental cleaning and disinfection strategy – Hand-washing with CDAD patients in outbreak • Further research needed – Role for antimicrobial controls in stemming this epidemic 1McDonald et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2007; 28:140-145 2See CDC C. difficile Fact Sheets: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dhqp/. Severe CDAD in Populations Previously at Low Risk—Four States, 2005 (1) • Recent reports to the Pennsylvania Department of Health and CDC – Young patients without serious underlying disease – C. difficile toxin-positive by routine diagnostic testing – Responded to CDAD-specific therapy • Peripartum – Within 4 weeks of delivery – Reports from PA, NJ, OH, and NH • Community-associated – No hospital exposure in prior 3 months – Reports from Philadelphia and 4 surrounding counties CDC. MMWR. 2005;54:1201-1205. Severe CDAD in Populations Previously at Low Risk—Four States, 2005 (2) Characteristic, No. (%) Community (N=23) Peripartum (N=10) Total (N=33) Aged < 18 years 11 (48) 0 (0) 11 (33) Female 15 (65) 10 (100) 25 (76) Antimicrobial exposure 15 (65) 9 (90) 24 (73) Bloody diarrhea 6 (26) 2 (20) 8 (24) Hospitalization necessary 6 (26) 4 (40) 10 (24) ER visit necessary 3 (13) 2 (20) 5 (15) Relapse 8 (35) 5 (50) 13 (39) CDC. MMWR. 2005;54:1201-1205. Severe CDAD in Populations Previously at Low Risk—Four States, 2005 (3) • Recent onset dates – February 26, 2003 – June 28, 2005 – Only 1 case in 2003 • Transmission to close contacts in 4 cases • 8 cases without antimicrobial exposure – 5 children; 3 required hospitalization – 3 had close contact with diarrheal illness • Another 3 cases with < 3 doses of antimicrobials • Clindamycin most common exposure (10 cases) • Estimated minimum annual incidence of communityassociated disease – 7.6 cases per 100,000 population – 1 case per 5,000 outpatient antimicrobial prescriptions CDC. MMWR. 2005;54:1201-1205. Comparison of Molecular Characteristics of 2 C. difficile Isolates with Historical Standard-Type Strains and a Recently Recognized Epidemic Strain, by Selected Characteristics, OH and PA, 2005 Standard Strain Epidemic Strain Ohio Strain Pennsylvania Strain 0 III IX XIV/XV < 80% related to NAP1† NAP1 85% related to NAP1 64% related to NAP1 Binary toxin _ + + + 18 bp deletion in tcdC _ + _ + Characteristic Toxinotype PFGE* pattern *Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. † North American pulsed-field type 1. McDonald LC, Killgore GE, Thompson A, Owens RC Jr, Kazakova SV, Sambol SP, Johnson S, Gerding DN. An epidemic, toxin gene-variant strain of Clostridium difficile. N Engl J Med. 2005;353:2433-2441. CDC. MMWR. 2005;54:1201-1205. Stomach Acid-Suppressing Medications and Community-Acquired CDAD, England From Dial S, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:2989-2995. Recommendations for CDAD in Previously Low-Risk Populations • Further investigation and surveillance in these populations are warranted – Strains responsible for severe CDAD in previously low-risk populations unknown – May be other toxin variants and/or hospital epidemic strain • Clinicians should consider the diagnosis – CDAD in patients without traditional risk factors • Patients should seek medical attention – Diarrhea lasting longer than 3 days – Fever – Blood • Antimicrobial exposure is not benign – Continue to emphasize judicious antimicrobial use