| Literature DB >> 28145453 |
Peter Moono1, Su Chen Lim1, Thomas V Riley2,3,4.
Abstract
Clostridium difficile is a well-established hospital pathogen. Recently, it has been detected increasingly in patients without hospital contact. Given this rise in community associated infections with C. difficile, we hypothesized that the environment could play an important role in transmission of spores outside the hospital. Lawn samples (311) collected in public spaces in the metropolitan area of Perth, Western Australia, from February to June 2016 were cultured for C. difficile. C. difficile was isolated from the samples by direct and enrichment culture, and characterized by standard molecular methods using toxin gene PCR and ribotyping. The overall prevalence of C. difficile was 59%, new lawn (≤4 months old) was twice as likely as old lawn (>4 months old) to test positive (OR = 2.3; 95%CI 1.16-4.57, p = 0.015) and 35 C. difficile ribotypes were identified with toxigenic ribotype 014/020 (39%) predominating. The highest viable count from lawn soil samples was 1200 CFU/g. These results show that lawns in Perth, Western Australia, harbor toxigenic C. difficile, an important finding. The source of lawn contamination is likely related to modern practice of producing "roll-out" lawn. Further work should focus on identifying specific management practices that lead to C. difficile contamination of lawn to inform prevention and control measures.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28145453 PMCID: PMC5286503 DOI: 10.1038/srep41196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The relationship between the prevalence of C. difficile in lawn and the age of the lawn, its size, sampling site, location, postcode, and season in Perth.
| Variable | Variable categories | Univariable model | Covariate Odds ratios (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odds ratios (95% CI) | Sampling site | ||||
| Age | Old lawn (n = 113) | 53 (47) | Referent | ||
| New lawn (n = 198) | 129 (65) | 2.11 (1.32–3.4) | 2.30 (1.16–4.57) | 0.015# | |
| Area | Extra-large (n = 85) | 53 (62) | Referent | ||
| Large (n = 53) | 26 (49) | 0.58 (0.28–1.16) | 0.49 (0.16–1.49) | 0.7 | |
| Medium (n = 101) | 60 (59) | 0.88 (0.49–1.59) | 1.02 (0.42–2.51) | 0.7 | |
| Small (n = 72) | 43 (60) | 0.89 (0.47–1.71) | 0.88 (0.32–2.43) | 0.7 | |
| Location | North (n = 161) | 98 (60.9) | Referent | ||
| South (n = 150) | 84 (56) | 1.22 (0.78–1.92) | 1.25 (0.61–2.59) | 0.99 | |
| Season | Autumn (n = 224) | 135 (60.3) | Referent | ||
| Winter (n = 87) | 47 (54) | 0.77 (0.47–1.28) | 0.67 (0.28–1.62) | 0.52 | |
*CI; The 95% confidence interval of odds ratio for the covariate estimates.
†CI; The 95% confidence interval of odds ratio for the univariate estimates.
‡Age of lawn; new lawn ≤4 months, old lawn >4 months.
¶P values are based on likelihood ratios and P < 0.05 was considered significant#.
Univariable logistic regression model with random effect (site of sampling and postcode). The random effect term for postcode was not included in all the models because its addition or removal did not change the model estimates significantly.
Viable counts of Clostridium difficile in soil from lawn samples using either phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.4) (PBST) or peptone saline (PST), both containing 0.1% Tween 20, as a diluent.
| Diluent | Sample (viable count cfu/g of soil) | No. samples positive | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | ||
| PBST | 0 | 0 | 0 | 50 | 50 | 250 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 100 | 4 |
| PST | 0 | 0 | 0 | 800 | 200 | 100 | 0 | 50 | 0 | 1200 | 5 |
The frequency and toxin gene profile of C. difficile ribotypes in lawns in Perth, Western Australia.
| Ribotype | Toxin gene profile | Number (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 014/020 | − | 71 (39.0) | ||
| 010 | − | − | − | 37 (20.3) |
| QX 077 | − | − | − | 13 (7.1) |
| QX 189 | − | − | − | 7 (3.9) |
| 039 | − | − | − | 5 (2.7) |
| QX 601 | − | − | − | 4 (2.2) |
| 393 | − | − | − | 4 (2.2) |
| QX 142 | − | − | − | 4 (2.2) |
| 002 | − | 4 (2.2) | ||
| Others | Various | Various | − | 33 (18.1) |
*Others: QX 518, QX 611, QX 608, QX 610, RT 056, RT 054, QX 607, QX 606, QX 605, QX 603, QX 602, QX 550, QX 449, QX 409, QX 393, QX 210, RT 125, QX 121, RT 106, QX 072, QX 067, QX 054, RT 018, RT 012, RT 009 and RT 043.