What is Clostridioides difficile?
Gram-positive, spore forming anaerobic bacillus
What is the difference between toxigenic strains and non-toxigenic strains?
Toxigenic strains produce Toxin A and B capable of invading the tissues and causing inflammation + infection (Toxin B is 10-40x more potent)
Non-toxigenic strains do not producing toxins, can only colonize without causing infection
Toxigenic strains may not necessarily cause infections if they do not actively secrete toxins
Clostridioides difficile is the causative organism of ______ and _______________
CDAD (Clostridioides difficile associated diarrhea)
and
Pseudomembranous colitis
*It is the most common cause of nosocomial diarrhea
Clostridioides difficile are spores that are transmitted via ___________ route
List examples of how it might be transmitted
Fecal-oral route
Presentation of Clostridioides difficile can range from ________ to __________
Asymptomatic carriage to Fulminant disease
May be asymptomatic due to:
How is antibiotics involved in the pathogenesis of C. diff infection?
What are the risk factors for C. diff?
All antibiotics are associated with CDI, esp those with gram-negative and anaerobic coverage (a/w the ecology of normal gut flora)
List the antibiotics with greatest risk of causing CDI. Also list those of medium risk.
Greatest risk:
Medium risk:
CDI risk is highest when receiving antibiotics but still elevated up to _________
Still elevated up to 12 weeks later (gut flora not yet return to normal ecology)
Antibiotic stewardship is important because the risk of CDI increases with?
*Impt to minimize FREQUENCY and DURATION of high-risk antibiotic therapy, as well as the NUMBER of Abx agents prescribed so as to reduce risk and hence incidence of CDI
Which antibiotic is preferred for use to prevent C. diff infection
(lowest risk of causing CDI)
Doxycyline/Tigecycline
List some CDI infection control and prevention measures
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
What is the cardinal symptom of CDI?
Cardinal symptom: Watery diarrhea (3 or more loose stools in 24h)
*Eliminate all other reason/cause for diarrhea
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
Describe the clinical presentation of mild CDI
Diarrhea, abdominal cramps
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
Describe the clinical presentation of moderate CDI
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
Describe the clinical presentation of severe CDI
*Much more systemic
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
Describe the clinical presentation of fulminant CDI
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
What is required to diagnose CDI?
AND
*1 is related to presentation, 2 is related to diagnostic tests
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
CDI testing should only be performed in symptomatic patients because?
CDI laboratory testing cannot distinguish b/w colonization and infection
We do not want to treat asymptomatic colonization
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
Are cultures taken for CDI diagnosing? Why or why not?
NO CULTURES (no stool, blood or urine culture)
- Due to long turnaround time
[1. Confirm presence of infection]
What stool tests (molecular/rapid diagnostic tests) are done for C. diff diagnosing? What are their respective pros and cons?
=> 1 and 2 can be done alone to confirm presence of infection, 3 and 4 must be done in combi
In which groups of patients should stool test for CDI be done?
Should stool test for CDI be repeated?
Do not repeat testing in <7 days
Do not repeat to document care
- Over 60% of patients with favourable clinical response continue to test positive for weeks
If patient is unable to discontinue additional antibiotic therapy when treating CDI, what should be considered?