4.7 Article

Laxative Use Does Not Preclude Diagnosis or Reduce Disease Severity in Clostridiodes difficile Infection

Journal

CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 71, Issue 6, Pages 1472-1478

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciz978

Keywords

Clostridiodes difficile infection; Clostridiodes difficile colonization; laxative; diarrhea

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [1R01AI116596-01]
  2. Institut Merieux

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Background To optimize utility of laboratory testing for Clostridiodes difficile infection (CDI), the 2017 Infectious Diseases Society of America-Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (IDSA-SHEA) clinical practice guidelines recommend excluding patients from stool testing for C. difficile if they have received laxatives within the preceding 48 hours. Sparse data support this recommendation. Methods Patients with new-onset diarrhea (>= 3 bowel movements in any 24-hour period in the 48 hours before stool collection) and a positive stool C. difficile nucleic acid amplification test were enrolled. Laxative use within 48 hours before stool testing, severity of illness (defined by 4 distinct scoring methods), and clinical outcomes were recorded. Results 209 patients with CDI were studied, 65 of whom had received laxatives. There were no significant differences in the proportion of patients meeting severe CDI criteria by 4 severity scoring methods in patients receiving versus not receiving laxatives (66.2% vs 56.3%, respectively; P = .224) by IDSA-SHEA, the primary scoring system. Similar rates of serious outcomes attributable to CDI, including death, intensive care unit admission, and colectomy, were observed in the laxative and no laxative groups. Conclusions Our study found similar rates of severe CDI and serious CDI-attributable clinical outcomes in CDI-diagnosed patients who did or did not receive laxatives. Precluding recent laxative users from CDI testing, as proposed by the IDSA-SHEA guideline, carries a potential for harm due to delayed diagnosis and treatment. Clostridiodes difficile infection severity and outcomes did not differ between those who had or had not received laxatives within 48 hours prior to diagnosis. These findings challenge the IDSA-SHEA guideline to exclude patients receiving laxatives from C. difficile testing.

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