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Erschienen in: Infectious Diseases and Therapy 4/2018

Open Access 10.09.2018 | Original Research

Prevalence of Clostridium Difficile-Associated Diarrhoea in Hospitalised Patients (Results of a Russian Prospective Multicentre Study)

verfasst von: Natalia V. Dmitrieva, Galina A. Klyasova, Natalia V. Bakulina, Marina A. Sukhina, Sergey V. Zhuravel, Elena A. Belousova, Vladimir T. Ivashkin, Sergey V. Goryunov, Elena A. Prokhorovich, Tatyana R. Kameneva, Aleksey A. Samsonov, Andrey V. Yakovenko, Stanislav V. Kazakov

Erschienen in: Infectious Diseases and Therapy | Ausgabe 4/2018

Abstract

Introduction

The objective of the study was to evaluate the prevalence of Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhoea (CDAD) among hospitalised patients with antibiotic-associated diarrhoea (AAD) in general and by specific types of medical care and hospital units.

Methods

A prospective, cross-sectional, non-interventional, multicentre study. The main inclusion criteria were: patient age ≥ 18 years, hospital stay of at least 48 h, current antibiotic therapy or antibiotic therapy within the previous 30 days, loose stools (Bristol stool types 5–7 and stool frequency ≥ 3 within ≤ 24 consecutive hours or exceeding normal for the patient) and signed informed consent form. The stool sample was taken to the local (study site) microbiology laboratory for detection of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and toxins A/B using enzyme immunoassay (EIA) stool test.

Results

From April 2016 to April 2017, a total of 1245 patients from 12 large hospitals were enrolled in the study. Data on 81 patients were excluded from the analysis for different reasons. Data on 1164 patients (45.2% males and 54.8% females) with a mean age of 54.9 years (range 18–95 years) were analysed. Length of hospitalisation was 2–188 days (median, 8 days). The EIA stool test showed CDAD-positive results in 21.7% (253/1164) patients. The patients were from surgery units (546/1164), internal medicine units (510/1164) and intensive care units (108/1164). The prevalence of CDAD among patients from surgery, internal medicine and intensive care units was 26.2, 17.8 and 17.6%, respectively. Oncology, gastroenterology, septic surgery, oncohaematology and general medical hospital units accounted for more than 75% of all patients included; the prevalence of CDAD by those hospital units was 11.3, 15.0, 39.2, 17.6, and 27.2%, respectively. The proportion of GDH-positive and toxin A/B-negative patients by the rapid stool test result was 16.8% (196/1164). The prevalence of CDAD varied widely between the hospitals (from 0 to 44.3%).

Conclusions

The prevalence of CDAD among hospitalised patients with AAD in this study was 21.7% (95% confidence interval: 14.8 and 28.7%). The percentage of CDAD varied widely between hospitals and by specific types of medical care and hospital units.
Hinweise

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Introduction

The use of antibiotics is associated with disorders of gastrointestinal tract function and diarrhoea in 5–39% patients [1, 2]. Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) is a common infectious cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea (AAD) [14]. C. difficile is capable of producing an enterotoxin (toxin A) and a cytotoxin (toxin B). Express laboratory tests for glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and free C. difficile toxins in stool are used for the diagnosis of C. difficile-associated diarrhoea (CDAD) [5].
Reports from other countries indicate that CDAD is becoming more common and requires special attention due to the risk of serious complications, including fatalities [69]. Russian clinical data on the epidemiology of CDAD are limited to individual retrospective–prospective single-centre studies [1013]. Due to the limited number of Russian studies dedicated to CDAD, further research on this issue within a Russian prospective multicentre epidemiological study is of scientific and clinical interest.
The objective of the study was to determine the prevalence of CDAD in hospitalised patients with antibiotic-associated diarrhoea (AAD) in general and in subgroups of patients from wards with different types of care and specialties.

Methods

Patients aged ≥ 18 years and hospitalised for at least 48 h, who developed diarrhoea symptoms while in the hospital and while taking antibiotics, or within 30 days of starting antibiotic therapy, and who agreed to participate in the study, were included in the prospective non-interventional multicentre epidemiological study.
Diarrhoea is defined as liquid stool corresponding to types 5–7 on the Bristol Stool Form Scale, with a frequency of ≥ 3 defecations in succession within ≤ 24 h or with defecation frequency that is higher than normal for a given patient. Under the exclusion criteria, patients could not participate in the study more than once. A stool sample was placed in a sterile container and transported to the local (on-site) microbiology laboratory for an enzyme immunoassay express test (CoproStrip™; SavyonDiagnostics, Israel) for the presence of GDH, toxin A and toxin B of C. difficile. The express test interpretation protocol is shown in Table 1.
Table 1
Interpretation protocol of the enzyme immunoassay express test results for the presence of GDH, toxin A and toxin B
Result
Interpretation
GDH (+), Toxin A (+), Toxin B (−)
CDAD
GDH (+), Toxin A (−), Toxin B (+)
CDAD
GDH (+), Toxin A (+), Toxin B (+)
CDAD
GDH (+), Toxin A (−), Toxin B (−)
C. difficile colonisation
GDH (−), Toxin A (+), Toxin B (+)
Invalid test resulta
GDH (−), Toxin A (+), Toxin B (−)
Invalid test resulta
GDH (−), Toxin A (−), Toxin B (+)
Invalid test resulta
aPatient data with invalid test results were excluded from statistical interpretation
The following patient data were included in the individual electronic registration card: date of birth, sex, main diagnosis leading to hospitalisation according to the International Classification of Diseases, revision 10 (ICD-10), hospitalisation date, characteristics of diarrhoea, information about the date and results of the express test for the presence of GDH, toxin A and toxin B in stool, the type of care provided (surgery, therapy, intensive care) and the medical specialty (gastroenterology, oncohaematology, oncology, etc.).
The primary endpoint, reflecting the presence of CDAD, was the percentage of patients with CDAD among the hospitalised patients with AAD who had an express stool test for GDH and free toxins of C. difficile. The secondary endpoints were the percentages of hospitalised patients with CDAD in subgroups classified according to specialty (gastroenterology, oncohaematology, oncology, etc.) and the type of care (surgery, therapy, intensive care). An additional endpoint was the percentage of hospitalised patients with CDAD who had positive express test results for GDH, but negative results for C. difficile toxins.
It was planned to include 1230 patients in the study. The sample size, which would ensure accuracy of the primary endpoint was calculated based on the following conditions: a simple random sampling model, width of the 95% confidence interval (CI) not exceeding 5% (2.5% error), risk of obtaining incomplete data below 20%. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS v22 for Windows operating system. The results were represented as standard variables of descriptive statistics. The study design was taken into account in the statistical analysis by the adjustment of the 95% CI using the methods proposed by the World Health Organization.
The study was conducted according to the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki as well as Good Epidemiological Practice (Guidelines of the International Society for Pharmaceutical Engineering and Good Pharmacy Practice, 2007).

Results

Characteristics of Patients

From April 2016 to April 2017, a total of 1245 patients from 12 large inpatient clinics located in Moscow and St Petersburg were enrolled in the study. Data from 81 patients (6.5%) were excluded from the statistical analysis and the description for the following reasons: invalid express test results, including negative results for GDH coinciding with positive results for C. difficile toxins (n = 60), admission to hospital for less than 48 h (n = 10), discrepancy between the express test dates and the study protocol (n = 5), violation of the exclusion criteria (n = 3), no full-time hospitalisation (day care facilities, n = 2), and incomplete patient data (n = 1) (Fig. 1).
The analysed data of the 1164 patients [526 males (45.2%) and 638 females (54.8%)] are presented. The age ranged from 18 to 95 years (average age, 54.9 years). The distribution of the patients by primary diagnosis is shown in Table 2.
Table 2
Distribution of patients by primary diagnosis
Code (ICD-10)
Diagnosis (ICD-10)
Number of patients
Patients (%)
(A00–B99)
Certain infectious and parasitic diseases
9
0.8
(C00–D48)
Neoplasms
386
33.2
(D50–D89)
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs and certain disorders involving the immune mechanism
5
0.4
(E00–E90)
Endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases
56
4.8
(G00–G99)
Diseases of the nervous system
4
0.3
(I00–I99)
Diseases of the circulatory system
168
14.4
(J00–J99)
Diseases of the respiratory system
75
6.4
(K00–K93)
Diseases of the digestive system
288
24.7
(L00–L99)
Diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue
67
5.8
(M00–M99)
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue
14
1.2
(N00–N99)
Diseases of the genitourinary system
24
2.1
(O00–O99)
Pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium
2
0.2
(Q00–Q99)
Certain conditions originating in the perinatal period
1
0.1
(R00–R99)
Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified
6
0.5
(S00–T98)
Injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes
39
3.4
(V01–Y98)
External causes of morbidity and mortality
1
0.1
(Z00–Z99)
Factors influencing health status and contact with health services
19
1.6
Total
1164
100.0
The diagnoses chiefly responsible for hospitalisation of 72.3% of the patients included neoplasms, diseases of the circulatory system, and diseases of the digestive system. The length of hospitalisation varied from 2 to 188 days, the median being 8 days (1st quartile 5 days, 3rd quartile 15 days). In the majority of cases (1131), the patients were hospitalised for between 2 and 50 days, with 7 patients for over 100 days.
Totals of 522 patients (44.9%) had type 7 diarrhoea on the Bristol Stool Form Scale, 475 patients (40.8%) had type 6 and 167 (14.3%) had type 5. A diarrhoea frequency of 3–8 defecations per day was observed in the majority of patients (944, 81.1%); 15 or more defecations were observed in 27 patients (2.3%).

Primary Endpoint

CDAD was diagnosed in 21.7% of patients with AAD (253/1164) according to the express test results (Table 3). The 95% CI for CDAD prevalence, calculated based on the simple random sampling model, was 19.4%, 24.1%. At the same time, the 95% CI adjusted for the study design was significantly wider (14.8%, 28.7%).
Table 3
Prevalence of positive express test results for GDH and C. difficile toxins
Result
Number of patients
Patients (%)
GDH (+), Toxin A (+), Toxin B (−)
61
24.1
GDH (+), Toxin A (−), Toxin B (+)
85
33.6
GDH (+), Toxin A (+), Toxin B (+)
107
42.3
Total
253
100

Secondary Endpoints

CDAD prevalence among the patients with AAD divided into groups by specialty of the provided care is shown in Table 4.
Table 4
Prevalence of CDAD in the groups of patients with AAD by specialty of the provided care
Type of care
Specialty
Number of patients with AAD
Number of patients with CDAD
Patients with CDAD (%)
Surgery
Vascular
8
5
62.5
Cardiology
9
4
44.4
Gastroenterology
17
8
47.1
General
25
4
16.0
Gynaecology
4
0
0.0
Hepatology
2
1
50.0
Neurology
17
5
29.4
Oncohaematology
1
0
0.0
Oncology
225
27
12.0
ENT
1
1
100.0
Colorectal surgery
4
3
75.0
Septic surgery
204
80
39.2
Thoracic surgery
2
2
100.0
Thoraco-abdominal surgery
6
0
0.0
Transplantation
3
0
0.0
Trauma
10
2
20.0
Urology
8
1
12.5
Total
546
143
26.2
Therapy
Cardiology
14
4
28.6
 
Chemotherapy
2
0
0.0
Gastroenterology
194
24
12.4
General
47
15
31.9
Nephrology
5
3
60.0
Neurology
30
10
33.3
Oncohaematology
142
25
17.6
Oncology
24
2
8.3
Pulmonology
40
4
10.0
Rheumatology
10
4
40.0
Toxicology
2
0
0.0
Total
510
91
17.8
Intensive care
Cardiology
7
1
14.3
Gastroenterology
2
0
0.0
General
20
6
30.0
Nephrology
1
0
0.0
Neurology
19
6
31.6
Oncohaematology
5
1
20.0
Oncology
8
0
0.0
Colorectal surgery
2
2
100.0
Toxicology
2
0
0.0
Transplantation
41
3
7.3
Trauma
1
0
0.0
Total
108
19
17.6
Overall total
 
1164
253
21.7
The majority of patients participating were from the departments of surgery (546/1164) and therapy (510/1164). The percentage of CDAD was 26.2% in the surgery patients and 17.8 and 17.6% in the therapy and intensive care patient groups, respectively. The surgical patients were predominantly in oncology (n = 225) and septic surgery (n = 204) departments. The percentages of CDAD were 12.0% among the [surgical] oncology patients and 39.2% in the septic surgical group. The majority of the medical patients were in the departments of gastroenterology (194/510), oncohaematology (142/510) and general medicine (47/510). CDAD prevalence in these departments were 12.4, 17.6 and 31.9%, respectively. The majority of the patients with CDAD in the intensive care units were transplant patients (n = 41). The percentage of CDAD in this group was 7.3%.
The prevalence of CDAD in the groups of patients with AAD by specialty is presented in Table 5.
Table 5
Prevalence of CDAD in the groups of patients with AAD by specialty of the provided care
Specialty
Number of patients
Number of patients with CDAD
Patients with CDAD (%)
Vascular
8
5
62.5
Cardiology
30
9
30.0
Chemotherapy
2
0
0.0
Gastroenterology
213
32
15.0
General
92
25
27.2
Gynaecology
4
0
0.0
Hepatology
2
1
50.0
Nephrology
6
3
50.0
Neurology
66
21
31.8
Oncohaematology
148
26
17.6
Oncology
257
29
11.3
ENT
1
1
100.0
Colorectal surgery
6
5
83.3
Pulmonology
40
4
10.0
Septic surgery
204
80
39.2
Rheumatology
10
4
40.0
Thoracic surgery
2
2
100.0
Thoraco-abdominal surgery
6
0
0.0
Toxicology
4
0
0.0
Transplantation
44
3
6.8
Trauma
11
2
18.2
Urology
8
1
12.5
Total
1164
253
21.7
According to the results, more than 75% of all enrolled patients were in the departments of oncology, gastroenterology, septic surgery, oncohaematology, and general medicine. The percentages of patients with CDAD in these departments amounted to 11.3, 15.0, 39.2, 17.6, and 27.2%, respectively.

Other Endpoints

Positive GDH express test results were observed in 38.6% of the patients (449/1164), while C. difficile did not produce A and B toxins in 16.8% of the cases (196/1164). It should also be noted that the percentage of patients with a CDAD varied among hospitals, from 0 to 44.3% (Table 6).
Table 6
Prevalence of CDAD at study sites
 
Number of patients
Number of patients with CDAD
Patients with CDAD (%)
1
37
0
0
2
27
2
7.4
3
68
5
7.4
4
201
19
9.5
5
123
17
13.8
6
43
6
14.0
7
127
21
16.5
8
108
20
18.5
9
112
28
25.0
10
7
2
28.6
11
31
9
29.0
12
280
124
44.3
Total
1164
253
21.7
A higher percentage of CDAD (26.7–42.9%) was observed in patients ≥ 65 years compared with patients < 65 years (14.1–17.2%) (Table 7).
Table 7
Prevalence of CDAD by age group
Age group (years)
Number of patients
Number of patients with CDAD
Patients with CDAD (%)
< 40
276
39
14.1
40–64
524
90
17.2
65–74
176
47
26.7
75–84
140
60
42.9
≥ 85
48
17
35.4
Total
1164
253
21.7

Discussion

The use of antibiotics is a proven risk factor for diarrhoea. According to McFarland, CDAD occurs in 5–39% of patients [1]. The research of Bartlett and Gilbert published in the 1990s demonstrated that diarrhoea developed in 5–10% of patients receiving ampicillin; 10–25%, amoxicillin/clavulanate; 15–20%, cefixime; and 2–5%, cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, azithromycin, clarithromycin, erythromycin and tetracycline [2, 3].
C. difficile predominates among the infectious causes of AAD [14]. The role of C. difficile in the development of CDAD and pseudomembranous colitis was established in 1978. In the majority of cases, the development of pathological conditions was associated with use of clindamycin [4]. Other pathogens of AAD include Clostridium perfringens [14], Staphylococcus aureus [15], Klebsiella oxytoca [16], and possibly Candida albicans [17].
C. difficile is able to produce enterotoxin (toxin A) and cytotoxin (toxin B), which disrupt the function of and damage mucous membranes and, therefore, play a leading role in the pathogenesis of the infectious diseases [18, 19]. The qualitative and quantitative parameters of toxin production are associated with severity of the disease [20, 21]. Non-toxin-producing strains of C. difficile are capable of colonisation, but do not usually damage the mucous membranes of the gastrointestinal tract [22].
Infectious diseases caused by C. difficile have different manifestations, from the mild form of the disease with few symptoms to a fulminant course of pseudomembranous colitis (toxic megacolon, bowel perforation) [6, 2326]. Relapse is observed in approximately 10–25% of patients 30 days after successful treatment [27, 28]. According to a European study, the attributive mortality was 2% in patients with diarrhoea that developed after ≥ 3 days after their hospital stay or in patients with suspected C. difficile infection. In another 7% of cases, the infection played a significant role in fatal outcomes [6].
The few Russian data on CDAD prevalence in patients with AAD obtained in single-centre studies differ markedly. For instance, 28.7% (154/563) and 51.5% (67/130) of cases were reported in general hospitals [10, 11]. An increase of CDAD prevalence among cancer patients from 15.6% (7/45) in 2011 to 24.2% (57/236) in 2013 was reported [12]. A high CDAD prevalence was observed in gastroenterology patients, 39.1% (93/238) [13].
The present study was conducted due to the scarcity of information on CDAD prevalence in the Russian Federation and the lack of relevant Russian multicentre studies. According to the results of the conducted express tests, CDAD was diagnosed in 21.7% of patients with AAD, which corresponds to the international data (15–25%) [29]. The study also demonstrated pronounced differences in CDAD prevalence between different inpatient facilities (from 0 to 44.3%) and between patient groups by type of care (surgery, 26.2%; therapy, 17.6%; intensive care, 17.8%) and by specialty (septic surgery, 39.2%; general medicine, 27.2%; oncohaematology, 17.2%; gastroenterology, 15.0%; oncology, 11.3%; transplantation, 6.8%). These differences may reflect the local characteristics of CDAD epidemiology. In particular, the researchers at the site with the highest CDAD prevalence (44.3%) also reported a particularly severe contingent of patients and an outbreak of the disease during the study.
The percentage of patients with GDH-positive express test results, but negative results for toxins, was 16.8%, while the total percentage of GDH-positive patients was 38.6%. Thus, about 39% of the patients with AAD participating in the study were colonised with C. difficile, whereas about half of the C. difficile colonisation cases were accompanied by toxin production and the onset of infection.
Patients age ≥ 65 years demonstrated higher CDAD prevalence (26.7–42.9%) in comparison with the patients < 65 years (14.1–7.2%). This was expected, since advanced age (≥ 65 years) is one of the known risk factors for the development of CDAD [30].
The results of this study and previously published Russian epidemiological studies suggest that CDAD is a common complication occurring in Russian hospitals. This makes it more relevant to carefully examine a patient with unexplained diarrhoea when the patient is on antibiotic treatment or within 30 days following such treatment. Significant differences in CDAD prevalence among hospitals and hospital departments may be associated with specific characteristics of the hospitalised patients, the environmental risk factors of C. difficile-associated disease and the local approaches to the monitoring of nosocomial infections.

Limitations of the Study

Only large inpatient treatment facilities in the Russian cities with a high population density (Moscow and St Petersburg) participated in the study. This limits the potential for extrapolating the data at the country-wide level.
The pronounced differences in CDAD prevalence rates between the research sites impacted the accuracy of primary endpoint assessment: the 95% CI adjusted for the study design turned out to be wider than the 95% CI based on the simple random sampling model, which was used for sample size calculation during the study planning process.
The express test used in the study has known sensitivity and specificity limitations reducing the accuracy of CDAD diagnosis. In particular, negative results of this laboratory test did not entirely rule out CDAD.

Conclusion

The prevalence of CDAD among hospitalised patients with AAD amounted to 21.7% (95% CI adjusted for the study design: 14.8%, 28.7%). There were pronounced differences in CDAD prevalence among inpatient care facilities (from 0% to 44.3%) and patient groups by the type of care and specialty.

Acknowledgements

This study was originally published in Russian in Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 2017; 19(4): 268-74. The study has been reproduced here in English with kind permission of the publisher, CMAC (www.​antibiotic.​ru/​cmac). The acknowledgements section has been altered from the original publication in accordance with Infectious Diseases and Therapy’s editorial requirements. The authors express their gratitude to the following for the participation in the organisation and conduct of the study: E.V. Volchkova, Z.V.Grigoryevskaya, S.N. Ignatyeva, S.A. Karaylova, I.A. Klyuchnikova, N.K. Kuznetsova, O.S. Lyashenko, T.P. Makedonskaya, N.V. Elionshkaya, E.A. Poluektova, A.Kh. Khubieva, E.P. Yakovenko.

Funding

The study and its publication were funded by JSC (joint stock company) Astellas Pharma. All the authors had copies of the Clinical Study and Statistical Report during preparation of the manuscript and had full access to the clinical study database, related to their own site (investigation centre). The data management (analysis) was performed by CRO, including certified statisticians.

Editorial Assistance

No writing support was provided. Conversis provided support for the translation, which was reviewed and approved by the corresponding author. This support was funded by Astellas.

Authorship

All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this article, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given their approval for this version to be published.

Disclosures

Stanislav V. Kazakov is an employee of the Medical Department of Astellas Pharma. Natalia V. Dmitrieva, Galina A. Klyasova, Natalia V. Bakulina, Marina A. Sukhina, Sergey V. Zhuravel, Elena A. Belousova, Vladimir T. Ivashkin, Sergey V. Goryunov, Elena A. Prokhorovich, Tatyana R. Kameneva, Aleksey A. Samsonov and Andrey V. Yakovenko received compensation as investigators for the DESCRIPTOR study.

Compliance with Ethics Guidelines

The manuscript included the statement ‘The study was conducted according to the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki as well as Good Epidemiological Practice [Guidelines of the International Society for Pharmaceutical Engineering and Good Pharmacy Practice, 2007], which is a translation from the original Russian publication.

Open Access

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by-nc/​4.​0/​), which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
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Metadaten
Titel
Prevalence of Clostridium Difficile-Associated Diarrhoea in Hospitalised Patients (Results of a Russian Prospective Multicentre Study)
verfasst von
Natalia V. Dmitrieva
Galina A. Klyasova
Natalia V. Bakulina
Marina A. Sukhina
Sergey V. Zhuravel
Elena A. Belousova
Vladimir T. Ivashkin
Sergey V. Goryunov
Elena A. Prokhorovich
Tatyana R. Kameneva
Aleksey A. Samsonov
Andrey V. Yakovenko
Stanislav V. Kazakov
Publikationsdatum
10.09.2018
Verlag
Springer Healthcare
Erschienen in
Infectious Diseases and Therapy / Ausgabe 4/2018
Print ISSN: 2193-8229
Elektronische ISSN: 2193-6382
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40121-018-0209-y

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