Back to Search Start Over

Risk Factors for Community-Associated Clostridium difficile Infection in Adults: A Case-Control Study

Authors :
Zintars G. Beldavs
Stacy Holzbauer
Sandra N. Bulens
Tory Whitten
Erin Parker
Monica M. Farley
Valerie Ocampo
Lucy E. Wilson
Erin C Phipps
Maria Karlsson
Danyel M Olson
Emily B. Hancock
Alice Guh
Zirka Smith
Carol Lyons
Wendy Bamberg
Cathleen Concannon
Brenda Rue
L. Clifford McDonald
Qunna Li
Rebecca Perlmutter
Lisa G. Winston
Ghinwa Dumyati
Marion A. Kainer
Susan Hocevar Adkins
Dale N. Gerding
Source :
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2017.

Abstract

Background An increasing proportion of Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) in the United States are community-associated (CA). We conducted a case-control study to identify CA-CDI risk factors. Methods We enrolled participants from 10 US sites during October 2014–March 2015. Case patients were defined as persons age ≥18 years with a positive C. difficile specimen collected as an outpatient or within 3 days of hospitalization who had no admission to a health care facility in the prior 12 weeks and no prior CDI diagnosis. Each case patient was matched to one control (persons without CDI). Participants were interviewed about relevant exposures; multivariate conditional logistic regression was performed. Results Of 226 pairs, 70.4% were female and 52.2% were ≥60 years old. More case patients than controls had prior outpatient health care (82.1% vs 57.9%; P < .0001) and antibiotic (62.2% vs 10.3%; P < .0001) exposures. In multivariate analysis, antibiotic exposure—that is, cephalosporin (adjusted matched odds ratio [AmOR], 19.02; 95% CI, 1.13–321.39), clindamycin (AmOR, 35.31; 95% CI, 4.01–311.14), fluoroquinolone (AmOR, 30.71; 95% CI, 2.77–340.05) and beta-lactam and/or beta-lactamase inhibitor combination (AmOR, 9.87; 95% CI, 2.76–340.05),—emergency department visit (AmOR, 17.37; 95% CI, 1.99–151.22), white race (AmOR 7.67; 95% CI, 2.34–25.20), cardiac disease (AmOR, 4.87; 95% CI, 1.20–19.80), chronic kidney disease (AmOR, 12.12; 95% CI, 1.24–118.89), and inflammatory bowel disease (AmOR, 5.13; 95% CI, 1.27–20.79) were associated with CA-CDI. Conclusions Antibiotics remain an important risk factor for CA-CDI, underscoring the importance of appropriate outpatient prescribing. Emergency departments might be an environmental source of CDI; further investigation of their contribution to CDI transmission is needed.

Details

ISSN :
23288957
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd59631c65695f9d924413c17187530c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx171