The Epidemiology of Community-acquired C. Difficile
The Epidemiology of Community-acquired C. Difficile
OBJECTIVES: Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a common hospital-acquired infection with increasing incidence, severity, recurrence, and associated morbidity and mortality. There are emerging data on the occurrence of CDI in nonhospitalized patients. However, there is a relative lack of community-based CDI studies, as most of the existing studies are hospital based, potentially influencing the results by referral or hospitalization bias by missing cases of community-acquired CDI.
METHODS: To better understand the epidemiology of community-acquired C. difficile infection, a population-based study was conducted in Olmsted County, Minnesota, using the resources of the Rochester Epidemiology Project. Data regarding severity, treatment response, and outcomes were compared in community-acquired vs. hospital-acquired cohorts, and changes in these parameters, as well as in incidence, were assessed over the study period.
RESULTS: Community-acquired CDI cases accounted for 41% of 385 definite CDI cases. The incidence of both community-acquired and hospital-acquired CDI increased significantly over the study period. Compared with those with hospital-acquired infection, patients with community-acquired infection were younger (median age 50 years compared with 72 years), more likely to be female (76% vs. 60%), had lower comorbidity scores, and were less likely to have severe infection (20% vs. 31%) or have been exposed to antibiotics (78% vs. 94%). There were no differences in the rates of complicated or recurrent infection in patients with community-acquired compared with hospital-acquired infection.
CONCLUSIONS: In this population-based cohort, a significant proportion of cases of CDI occurred in the community. These patients were younger and had less severe infection than those with hospital-acquired infection. Thus, reports of CDI in hospitalized patients likely underestimate the burden of disease and overestimate severity.
Clostridium difficile is recognized as the primary infectious cause of pseudomembranous colitis and the principal cause of infectious diarrhea in hospitalized patients. Recent studies have shown increasing incidence, severity, and recurrence rates of C. difficile infection (CDI). For example, the incidence of health-care-acquired CDI increased 2–2.5-fold from the late 1990s to the early 2000s, and even more in the elderly. There has also been a significant increase in severe cases, colectomies, and death related to CDI. However, most of the recent literature assessing these trends in CDI is based on hospitalized patients, and hence is potentially influenced by hospitalization or referral biases. A few studies have described the emergence of community-acquired CDI, but there is a lack of population-based studies describing CDI. We assessed CDI incidence, risk factors, and outcomes in a population-based cohort, including community-acquired infections in outpatients as well as hospitalized inpatients.
Abstract and Introduction
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a common hospital-acquired infection with increasing incidence, severity, recurrence, and associated morbidity and mortality. There are emerging data on the occurrence of CDI in nonhospitalized patients. However, there is a relative lack of community-based CDI studies, as most of the existing studies are hospital based, potentially influencing the results by referral or hospitalization bias by missing cases of community-acquired CDI.
METHODS: To better understand the epidemiology of community-acquired C. difficile infection, a population-based study was conducted in Olmsted County, Minnesota, using the resources of the Rochester Epidemiology Project. Data regarding severity, treatment response, and outcomes were compared in community-acquired vs. hospital-acquired cohorts, and changes in these parameters, as well as in incidence, were assessed over the study period.
RESULTS: Community-acquired CDI cases accounted for 41% of 385 definite CDI cases. The incidence of both community-acquired and hospital-acquired CDI increased significantly over the study period. Compared with those with hospital-acquired infection, patients with community-acquired infection were younger (median age 50 years compared with 72 years), more likely to be female (76% vs. 60%), had lower comorbidity scores, and were less likely to have severe infection (20% vs. 31%) or have been exposed to antibiotics (78% vs. 94%). There were no differences in the rates of complicated or recurrent infection in patients with community-acquired compared with hospital-acquired infection.
CONCLUSIONS: In this population-based cohort, a significant proportion of cases of CDI occurred in the community. These patients were younger and had less severe infection than those with hospital-acquired infection. Thus, reports of CDI in hospitalized patients likely underestimate the burden of disease and overestimate severity.
Introduction
Clostridium difficile is recognized as the primary infectious cause of pseudomembranous colitis and the principal cause of infectious diarrhea in hospitalized patients. Recent studies have shown increasing incidence, severity, and recurrence rates of C. difficile infection (CDI). For example, the incidence of health-care-acquired CDI increased 2–2.5-fold from the late 1990s to the early 2000s, and even more in the elderly. There has also been a significant increase in severe cases, colectomies, and death related to CDI. However, most of the recent literature assessing these trends in CDI is based on hospitalized patients, and hence is potentially influenced by hospitalization or referral biases. A few studies have described the emergence of community-acquired CDI, but there is a lack of population-based studies describing CDI. We assessed CDI incidence, risk factors, and outcomes in a population-based cohort, including community-acquired infections in outpatients as well as hospitalized inpatients.
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