Literature DB >> 29685855

Molecular epidemiologic study of Clostridium difficile infections in university hospitals: Results of a nationwide study in Japan.

Issei Tokimatsu1, Katsumi Shigemura2, Kayo Osawa3, Shinya Kinugawa3, Koichi Kitagawa4, Noriko Nakanishi5, Hiroyuki Yoshida6, Soichi Arakawa7, Masato Fujisawa8.   

Abstract

We conducted a nationwide molecular epidemiological study of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) in Japan investigated the correlation between the presence of binary toxin genes and CDI severity. This is the first report on molecular epidemiological analyses for CDI in multiple university hospitals in Japan, to our knowledge. We examined 124,484 hospitalized patients in 25 national and public university hospitals in Japan between December 2013 and March 2014, investigating antimicrobial susceptibilities and toxin-related genes for C. difficile isolates from stools. Epidemiological genetic typing was performed by PCR-ribotyping and repetitive sequence-based (rep)-PCR to examine the genetic similarities. The results detected toxin A-positive, toxin B-positive, binary toxin-negative (A+B+CDT-) detected from 135 isolates (80.8%) and toxin A-negative, toxin B-positive, binary toxin-negative (A- B+CDT-) in 23 (13.8%). Toxin A-positive, toxin B-positive, and binary toxin-positive (A+B+CDT+) were seen in 9 isolates (5.4%). Vancomycin (n = 81, 37.7%) or metronidazole (n = 88, 40.9%) therapies were undertaken in analyzed cases. Ribotypes detected from isolates were 017/subgroup 1, 070, 078, 126, 176, 449, 475/subgroup 1, 499, 451, 566 and newtypes. Rep-PCR classified 167 isolates into 28 cluster groups including 2-15 isolates. In addition, 2 pairs of strains isolated from different institutions belonged to the same clusters. Seven out of 9 (77.8%) of the patients with binary toxin producing strains had "mild to moderate" outcome in evaluated symptoms. In conclusion, we found that binary toxin did not show regional specificity and had no relevance to severity of CDI.
Copyright © 2018 Japanese Society of Chemotherapy and The Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clostridium difficile infection; Clostridium difficile toxin; Cluster analysis; Epidemiology; Nationwide study

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29685855     DOI: 10.1016/j.jiac.2018.03.015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Infect Chemother        ISSN: 1341-321X            Impact factor:   2.211


  2 in total

1.  Frequency of toxin genes and antibiotic resistance pattern of Clostridioides difficile isolates in diarrheal samples among hospitalized patients in Hamadan, Iran.

Authors:  Leili Shokoohizadeh; Fatemeh Alvandi; Abbas Yadegar; Masoumeh Azimirad; Seyed Hamid Hashemi; Mohammad Yousef Alikhani
Journal:  Gastroenterol Hepatol Bed Bench       Date:  2021

2.  Toxin profiles and antimicrobial resistance patterns among toxigenic clinical isolates of Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile.

Authors:  Hamid Heidari; Hadi Sedigh Ebrahim-Saraie; Ali Amanati; Mohammad Motamedifar; Nahal Hadi; Abdollah Bazargani
Journal:  Iran J Basic Med Sci       Date:  2019-07       Impact factor: 2.699

  2 in total

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