| Literature DB >> 34030712 |
Lei Deng1,2, Huiyi Tay1, Guangneng Peng2, Jonathan W J Lee3,4, Kevin S W Tan5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blastocystis is a common anaerobic colonic protist in humans with controversial pathogenicity. Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) is the commonest cause of infectious diarrhea in healthcare settings. The prevalence and subtype (ST) characteristics of Blastocystis in patients with C. difficile infection (CDI) are rarely documented. Therefore, the present study was conducted to investigate the prevalence and subtype characteristics of Blastocystis in patients with suspicion of CDI in Singapore.Entities:
Keywords: Blastocystis; Clostridium difficile; Diarrhea; Pathogenicity; ST7
Year: 2021 PMID: 34030712 PMCID: PMC8142501 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-021-04749-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
The prevalence and subtype distributions of Blastocystis among different groups
| Groups | No. examined | No. positive | Prevalence (%) (95%) | OR (95%) | Subtypes ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group A | 139 | 13 | 9.4% (4.5–14.2) | Reference | ST7 (9), ST3 (3), ST1 (1) | |
| Group B | 50 | 7 | 14% (4.4–23.6) | 1.615 (0.605–4.3110) | 0.363 | ST7 (5), ST1 (2) |
| Group C | 59 | 5 | 8.5% (1.4–15.6) | 0.919 (0.312–2.703) | 0.844 | ST7 (2), ST1 (2), ST3 (1) |
| Total | 248 | 25 | 10.1% | ST7 (16), ST1 (5), ST3 (4) |
Group A represents C. difficile antigen-negative patients; group B represents C. difficile antigen-positive and toxigenic-negative patients; group C represents both C. difficile antigen- and toxigenic-positive patients
The prevalence of Blastocystis in diarrheal patients by gender, age, and ethnicity
| Characteristics | No. of examined | No. of positive | Prevalence (%) (95%) | OR (95%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||||
| Male | 104 | 14 | 13.5% (6.9–20) | 1.881 (0.817–4.33) | 0.138 |
| Female | 144 | 11 | 7.6% (3.3–12) | Reference | |
| Age (years) | |||||
| ≤ 17 | 15 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.999 |
| 18–64 | 108 | 14 | 13% (6.6–19.3) | 1.554 (0.669–3.56) | 0.309 |
| ≥ 65 | 125 | 11 | 8.8% (3.8–13.8) | Reference | |
| Ethnicity | |||||
| Chinese | 150 | 16 | 10.7% (5.7–15.6) | 1.075 (0.293–3.945) | 0.914 |
| Malay | 39 | 1 | 2.6% (2.4–7.5) | 0.237 (0.023–2.401) | 0.223 |
| Indian | 29 | 5 | 17.2% (3.5–31.0) | 1.875 (0.405–8.688) | 0.422 |
| Others | 30 | 3 | 10% (0.7–20.1) | Reference | |
| Antibiotics | |||||
| No indicated | 226 | 24 | 10.6% (6.6–14.6) | 2.495 (0.321–19.386) | 0.382 |
| Treated | 22 | 1 | 4.5% (4.2–13.2) | Reference | |
| Total | |||||
Fig. 1The prevalence and subtype distribution of Blastocystis in group A (C. difficile negative, and toxin negative), group B (C. difficile positive, and toxin negative), and group C (C. difficile positive, and toxin positive)
Fig. 2Phylogenetic relationships among nucleotide sequences of Blastocystis partial small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) gene. The neighbor-joining method was used to construct the trees by the Kimura two-parameter model. The number on the branches are percent bootstrapping values from 1000 replicates, with values of more than 50% shown in the tree. Each sequence is identified by its subtype, host, accession number, and country. Blastocystis subtypes identified in the present study are indicated in bold type