| Literature DB >> 33260943 |
Guido Granata1, Alessandro Bartoloni2, Mauro Codeluppi3, Ilaria Contadini4, Francesco Cristini4, Massimo Fantoni5, Alice Ferraresi6, Chiara Fornabaio6, Sara Grasselli3, Filippo Lagi2, Luca Masucci5, Massimo Puoti7, Alessandro Raimondi7, Eleonora Taddei8, Filippo Fabio Trapani9, Pierluigi Viale9, Stuart Johnson10, Nicola Petrosillo1.
Abstract
Data on the burden of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) in Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients are scant. We conducted an observational, retrospective, multicenter, 1:3 case (COVID-19 patients with CDI)-control (COVID-19 patients without CDI) study in Italy to assess incidence and outcomes, and to identify risk factors for CDI in COVID-19 patients. From February through July 2020, 8402 COVID-19 patients were admitted to eight Italian hospitals; 38 CDI cases were identified, including 32 hospital-onset-CDI (HO-CDI) and 6 community-onset, healthcare-associated-CDI (CO-HCA-CDI). HO-CDI incidence was 4.4 × 10,000 patient-days. The percentage of cases recovering without complications at discharge (i.e., pressure ulcers, chronic heart decompensation) was lower than among controls (p = 0.01); in-hospital stays was longer among cases, 35.0 versus 19.4 days (p = 0.0007). The presence of a previous hospitalisation (p = 0.001), previous steroid administration (p = 0.008) and the administration of antibiotics during the stay (p = 0.004) were risk factors associated with CDI. In conclusions, CDI complicates COVID-19, mainly in patients with co-morbidities and previous healthcare exposures. Its association with antibiotic usage and hospital acquired bacterial infections should lead to strengthen antimicrobial stewardship programmes and infection prevention and control activities.Entities:
Keywords: Clostridioides difficile infection; case-control study; coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic; hospital-onset; risk factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 33260943 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9123855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241