| Literature DB >> 30967977 |
Rawish Fatima1, Muhammad Aziz2.
Abstract
Clostridium difficile is a gram-positive bacterium notorious for causing epidemic diarrhea globally with a significant health burden. The pathogen is clinically challenging with increasing antibiotic resistance and recurrence rate. We provide here an in-depth review of one particular strain/ribotype 027, commonly known as NAP1/B1/027 or North American pulsed-field gel electrophoresis type 1, restriction endonuclease analysis type B1, polymerase chain reaction ribotype 027, which has shown a much higher recurrence rate than other strains.Entities:
Keywords: clostridium difficile; diarrhea; nap1/b1/027; recurrence; ribotype 027
Year: 2019 PMID: 30967977 PMCID: PMC6440555 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.3977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Virulent factors associated with NAP1/B1/027 strain
CDTa toxin: CD196 ADP-ribosyltransferase a toxin; CDTb toxin: CD196 ADP-ribosyltransferase b toxin; NAP1/B1/027: North American pulsed-field gel electrophoresis type 1, restriction endonuclease analysis type B1, polymerase chain reaction ribotype 027
| Virulent factor | Mechanism | |
| 1. | Toxin A (Enterotoxin A or TcdA) | Damages the actin in target cells which leads to neutrophil infiltration, inflammation, and necrosis of epithelial cells [ |
| 2. | Toxin B (Cytotoxin B or TcdB) | Damages tight junctions of epithelial cells, which increases vascular permeability and causes hemorrhage [ |
| 3. | CDTa toxin | Modification of actin with ADP-ribosylation that results in actin depolymerization and destruction of the cytoskeleton that assists in adherence of bacteria to gut epithelial cells [ |
| 4. | CDTb toxin | Facilitates uptake of CDTa toxin into the gut epithelial lining [ |
| 5. | Hypersporulation | Increases reproduction and spread of bacteria [ |
| 6. | TcdC gene mutation (18-bp deletion) | Increases the production of Toxin A and Toxin B by down-regulation of feedback inhibitor involved in suppressing toxin production [ |
Proposed Treatment for NAP1/B1/027 Strain
IV: intravenous; IVIG: intravenous immunoglobulin; NAP1/BI/027: North American pulsed-field gel electrophoresis type 1, restriction endonuclease analysis type B1, polymerase chain reaction ribotype 027
| First line treatment | Alternative treatment | |
| Initial non-severe infection | Oral vancomycin, 125 mg four times daily for 10 days | Fidaxomicin, 200 mg twice daily for 10 days; If neither is available, then use metronidazole, 500 mg three times daily for 10 days |
| First non-severe recurrence | Repeat oral vancomycin, 125 mg four times daily for 10 days | Fidaxomicin, 200 mg twice daily for 10 days |
| Second non-severe recurrence | Oral vancomycin taper as follow: 125 mg four times daily for seven to 14 days, 125 mg twice daily for seven days, 125 mg twice once daily for seven days, 125 mg once every other day for seven days, 125 mg once every three days for 14 days | Fidaxomicin, 200 mg orally twice daily for 10 days, or a fecal microbiota transplant |
| Subsequent non-severe recurrence | Fecal microbiota transplant | Tapering oral vancomycin with probiotics, IVIG, fidaxomicin |
| Severe disease | Oral vancomycin, 125 mg four times daily, increase to 500 mg four times daily if no improvement noted in 24-48 hours or associated complications, including renal failure, ileus, etc. | Fidaxomicin if the patient cannot tolerate oral vancomycin for any reason |
| Ileus | Add IV metronidazole, 500 mg every eight hours, to oral vancomycin or fidaxomicin therapy; consider general surgery consult as needed | Intracolonic vancomycin, IVIG |