| Literature DB >> 20350373 |
Marya D Zilberberg1, Glenn S Tillotson, Clifford McDonald.
Abstract
We evaluated the annual rate (cases/10,000 hospitalizations) of pediatric hospitalizations with Clostridium difficile infection (CDI; International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, clinical modification code 008.45) in the United States. We performed a time-series analysis of data from the Kids' Inpatient Database within the Health Care Cost and Utilization Project during 1997-2006 and a cross-sectional analysis within the National Hospital Discharge Survey during 2006. The rate of pediatric CDI-related hospitalizations increased from 7.24 to 12.80 from 1997 through 2006; the lowest rate was for children <1 year of age. Although incidence was lowest for newborns (0.5), incidence for children <1 year of age who were not newborns (32.01) was similar to that for children 5-9 years of age (35.27), which in turn was second only to incidence for children 1-4 years of age (44.87). Pediatric CDI-related hospitalizations are increasing. A better understanding of the epidemiology and outcomes of CDI is urgently needed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20350373 PMCID: PMC3363321 DOI: 10.3201/eid1604.090680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Clostridium difficile infection–related hospitalizations, by year and age group, HCUP and KID, United States*
| Characteristic | 1997 | 2000 | 2003 | 2006 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group, y | ||||
| <1 | 1,269 | 1,444 | 1,586 | 2,269 |
| 1–4 | 1,480 | 1,453 | 1,880 | 2,587 |
| 5–9 | 699 | 673 | 934 | 1,255 |
| 10–14 | 602 | 815 | 920 | 1,197 |
| 15–17 | 576 | 574 | 716 | 1,110 |
| All | 4,625 | 4,960 | 6,035 | 8,417 |
| % CDIs as principal diagnosis | 0.31 | 0.29 | 0.27 | 0.29 |
*HCUP, Health Care Utilization Project; KID, Kids’ Inpatient Database; CDIs, C. difficile infections. The sums of individual age groups may not add up to the number of total cases because numbers represent rounded values of weighted estimates.
Figure 1Age-specific incidence of patients with Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) per 10,000 hospitalizations, Health Care Utilization Project Kids’ and Inpatient Database, United States, 1997–2006.
Figure 2Incidence of infectious diarrhea hospitalizations per 10,000 all-cause hospitalizations, Health Care Utilization Project and Kids’ Inpatient Database, United States, 1997–2006. CDI, Clostridium difficile infection.
Demographic characteristics for CDIs, National Hospital Discharge Survey, United States, 2006*
| Characteristic | No. (%) CDIs | No. (%)
non-CDIs |
|---|---|---|
| All pediatric hospitalizations | 98 | 69,651 |
| Age, y | ||
| Newborn | 2 | 40,022 |
| <1 but not newborn | 24 | 7,474 |
| 1–4 | 32 | 7,099 |
| 5–9 | 16 | 4,521 |
| 10–14 | 13 | 4,943 |
| 15–17 | 11 | 5,690 |
| Sex | ||
| M | 48 (49.0) | 35,941 (51.5) |
| F | 50 (51.0) | 33,808 (48.5) |
| Race | ||
| Caucasian | 59 (60.2) | 39,457 (52.3) |
| African American | 12 (12.2) | 9,602 (13.8) |
| Other | 7 (7.1) | 5,589 (8.0) |
| Not stated | 20 (20.4) | 18,069 (26.0) |
*CDIs, Clostridium difficile infections.
Figure 3Age-specific incidence of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) hospitalizations, National Hospital Discharge Survey, United States, 2006. *Newborn (i.e., during hospitalization for birth); †not newborn (i.e., during subsequent hospitalization).