Abstract

PurposeHospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) remains one of the major hospital-acquired infections in China. Antibiotic treatment of HAP may lead to subsequent Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). Baseline data on the occurrence of CDI among HAP patients in China are currently unavailable. This study examines the risk and disease burden of CDI among HAP hospitalized patients (HAP-CDI).MethodsWe conducted a prospective study among ICU patients with HAP and hospital-onset diarrhea from January 2014 to December 2014 in a teaching hospital in China. All stool specimens were cultured for C. difficile which were typed by MLST. We used univariate and multivariable regression analyses to identify risk factors of HAP-CDI.FindingsIn total, 369 patients who met the inclusion criteria were enrolled. Thirty-two patients tested C. difficile positive. Among the isolated C. difficile strains, 90.63% (29/32) isolates were toxinogenic. Various MLST types were identified. The incidence of HAP-CDI was 11.67/10,000 patient days (95% CI, 7.97–16.55). Nineteen patients died from complications. The attributable mortality rate was 5.15% (19/369). The mortality rate of HAP-CDI group was 13.79% which was higher than HAP-non-CDI group. Univariate analyses demonstrated that old age, receiving antibiotics (OR = 8.70) and glucocorticoids (OR = 7.71) 1 month prior to hospitalization, respiratory failure (OR = 3.28) and receiving antimicrobials during hospitalization (OR = 1.15) were the risk factors associated with CDI. Multivariate conditional logistic regression analysis demonstrated the similar results.ConclusionCDI was common among patients discharged from hospital for HAP at a university hospital. Prevention of the spreading of C. difficile among hospitalized patients is urgently needed.

Highlights

  • Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of hospital-acquired infection (HAI) worldwide [1]

  • Twenty-nine patients were diagnosed with CDI (HAP-CDI group)

  • Three hundred and forty patients were identified as hospital-onset diarrhea (HOD) without C. difficile (HAP-non-CDI group) (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of hospital-acquired infection (HAI) worldwide [1]. Clostridium difficile is one of the pathogens monitored for HAI studies in the United States [2]. Clostridium difficile has surpassed multi-drug resistant organisms (MDROs) such as methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) as the most common pathogen causing HAI. CDI causes more than 450,000 cases and 29,000 deaths in the United States each year [2,3,4]. 172,000 CDI cases occur each year across the 27 countries of the European Union (EU) [5]. Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) is the most prevalent HAI in China [6]. HAP leads to increased antibiotic treatment in hospitals [7]. Broad-spectrum antibiotics are often empirically prescribed to treat HAP

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