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Gastrointestinal Research | See downloads for: Adobe Files |
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A large outbreak of Clostridium
difficile-associated disease with an unexpected proportion of deaths
and colectomies at a teaching hospital following increased
fluoroquinolone use. Muto CA, Pokrywka M, Shutt K, Mendelsohn AB, Nouri K, Posey K,
Roberts T, Croyle K, Krystofiak S, Patel-Brown S, Pasculle AW,
Paterson DL, Saul M, Harrison LH. Division of Hospital Epidemiology and Infection Control, University
of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Presbyterian Campus, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 15213, USA. mutoca@msx.upmc.edu BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Fluoroquinolones have not been frequently
implicated as a cause of Clostridium difficile outbreaks. Nosocomial
C. difficile infections increased from 2.7 to 6.8 cases per 1000
discharges (P < .001). During the first 2 years of the outbreak, there
were 253 nosocomial C. difficile infections; of these, 26 resulted in
colectomy and 18 resulted in death. We conducted an investigation of a
large C. difficile outbreak in our hospital to identify risk factors
and characterize the outbreak. METHODS: A retrospective case-control
study of case-patients with C. difficile infection from January 2000
through April 2001 and control-patients matched by date of hospital
admission, type of medical service, and length of stay; an analysis of
inpatient antibiotic use; and antibiotic susceptibility testing and
molecular subtyping of isolates were performed. RESULTS: On logistic
regression analysis, clindamycin (odds ratio [OR], 4.8; 95% confidence
interval [CI95], 1.9-12.0), ceftriaxone (OR, 5.4; CI95, 1.8-15.8), and
levofloxacin (OR, 2.0; CI95, 1.2-3.3) were independently associated
with infection. The etiologic fractions for these three agents were
10.0%, 6.7%, and 30.8%, respectively. Fluoroquinolone use increased
before the onset of the outbreak (P < .001); 59% of case-patients and
41% of control-patients had received this antibiotic class. The
outbreak was polyclonal, although 52% of isolates belonged to two
highly related molecular subtypes. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to
levofloxacin was an independent risk factor for C. difficile-associated
diarrhea and appeared to contribute substantially to the outbreak.
Restricted use of levofloxacin and the other implicated antibiotics
may be required to control the outbreak Pharmacotherapy. 2005
Jan;25(1):116-8. Related Articles, Links
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