Abstract

IntroductionClostridium difficile ribotype 027 (Cd027) has caused outbreaks in the United States, Canada, and Europe since 2001. In Spain, the importance of Cd027 is still unknown. In 2007, we began active surveillance of Cd027 to determine its incidence in our hospital. MethodsFrom January 2007 to April 2012, isolates of C. difficile by multiplex PCR were studied to detect toxin genes. Binary toxin-positive isolates were characterized using PCR-ribotyping. Cd027 were further characterized by toxino-typing, sequencing of tcdC gene, and MLVA (multilocus-variable-number-tandem-repeat-analysis). ResultsOnly 8 strains were Cd027 from 3666 isolates of C. difficile analyzed during the study period. These strains were isolated from 4 patients: a Spanish patient previously hospitalized in the UK, a pregnant laboratory technician, a British tourist, and a Spanish patient without epidemiological antecedents for acquiring Cd027. MLVA typing of Cd027 isolates revealed 4 different patterns. The first patient had 2 episodes of diarrhea caused by different Cd027. The strains from the first episode of patient 1 and the strain from patient 2 were grouped in the same clonal cluster (these cases were previously published as laboratory transmission), while strains from patients 3 and 4 were genetically unrelated to each other, and to the strains from patients 1 and 2. ConclusionWe report the first finding of an autochthonous case of non-severe Cd027 infection. Our results indicate that Cd027 diarrhea is uncommon in our area, and it appears mainly as imported cases. MLVA typing enables us to distinguish different genotypes among our Cd027 isolates.

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