4.5 Article

Comparison of Risk Stratification Approaches to Identify Patients with Clostridioides difficile Infection at Risk for Multidrug-Resistant Organism Gut Microbiota Colonization

Journal

INFECTIOUS DISEASES AND THERAPY
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 2005-2015

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s40121-023-00843-9

Keywords

VRE; MRSA; CRE; CDI; Antimicrobial stewardship

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to develop predictive indices for multidrug-resistant organism (MDRO) gut colonization in patients with Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). They compared the predictive performance of a regression-based risk score with two other simplified risk stratification approaches. The results showed that a simplified approach using prior healthcare exposure and receipt of prior antibiotics was as effective as individual patient/antibiotic risk modeling in identifying patients at risk for MDRO gut colonization.
IntroductionMultidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO) commonly colonize the gut microbiota of patients with Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). This increases the likelihood of systemic infections with these MDROs. To help guide MDRO screening and/or empiric antibiotic therapy, we derived and compared predictive indices for MDRO gut colonization in patients with CDI.MethodsThis was a multicenter, retrospective cohort study of adult patients with CDI from July 2017 to April 2018. Stool samples were screened for MDRO via growth and speciation on selective antibiotic media and confirmed using resistance gene polymerase chain reaction. A regression-based risk score for MDRO colonization was constructed. Predictive performance via area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (aROC) of this index was compared with two other simplified risk stratification approaches: (1) prior healthcare exposure and/or high-CDI risk antibiotics; (2) number of prior high-CDI risk antibiotics.Results50 (20.8%) of 240 included patients had MDRO colonization; 35 (14.6%) VRE, 18 (7.5%) MRSA, 2 (0.8%) CRE. Prior fluoroquinolone (aOR 2.404, 95% CI 1.095-5.279) and prior vancomycin (1.996, 95% CI 1.014-3.932) were independently associated with MDRO colonization while prior clindamycin (aOR 3.257, 95% CI 0.842-12.597) and healthcare exposure (aOR 2.138, 95% CI 0.964-4.740) were retained as explanatory variables. The regression-based risk score significantly predicted MDRO colonization (aROC 0.679, 95% CI 0.595-0.763), but was not significantly more predictive than prior healthcare exposure + prior antibiotics (aROC 0.646, 95% CI 0.565-0.727) or number of prior antibiotic exposures (aROC 0.642, 95% CI 0.554-0.730); P > 0.05 for both comparisons.ConclusionA simplified approach using prior healthcare exposure and receipt of prior antibiotics known to increase CDI risk identified patients at risk for MDRO gut microbiome colonization as effectively as individual patient/antibiotic risk modeling.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available