Appropriate cleaning reduces potential risk of spore transmission from patients with Clostridioides difficile infection treated in outpatient infusion centers
Patients with Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) who receive treatment at outpatient infusion centers (OICs) pose a risk for spore transmission. We investigated C. difficile contamination in the environment of CDI and non-CDI patients and evaluated the effectiveness of standard cleaning. This...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Anaerobe 2022-10, Vol.77, p.102617-102617, Article 102617 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Patients with Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) who receive treatment at outpatient infusion centers (OICs) pose a risk for spore transmission. We investigated C. difficile contamination in the environment of CDI and non-CDI patients and evaluated the effectiveness of standard cleaning.
This is a multicenter, non-conventional study including 8 OICs between October 2019 and December 2020. Samples were collected at baseline, after infusion, and after cleaning CDI and non-CDI areas. Cleaning was performed using hypochlorite and non-hypochlorite products for CDI and non-CDI, respectively. Samples were cultured for toxigenic C. difficile and strain-typed via fluorescent PCR ribotyping and whole-genome sequencing.
The overall C. difficile contamination rate was 7.9% (156/1969) with 8.1% in patient and 5.6% in non-patient care areas, respectively. For CDI areas, contamination rates were 5.9% at baseline, 15.0% after infusion, and significantly reduced to 6.2% after cleaning (P = 0.004). For non-CDI areas, contamination was similar at baseline (9.5%), after infusion (7.6%), and after cleaning (4.3%). The difference in C. difficile-positive samples after infusion was significant for CDI vs. non-CDI (15.0% vs. 7.6%, P = 0.004). Overall contamination was 11.5% for floors, 7.9% for infusion chairs, and 3.8% for equipment (P = 0.001). The most frequent ribotypes were F014-020 (42.6%), F106 (15.6%), F255 (6.1%), F001 (5.2%) and F027 (3.5%). Cleaning resulted in elimination of F106, F255, F001, F027 and partial reduction of F014-020.
Environmental C. difficile contamination was increased after CDI infusions and significantly reduced after cleaning with a hypochlorite solution, reducing the potential risk of spore transmission to others.
•C. difficile contamination in infusion centers with CDI and non-CDI patients was studied.•A total of 1969 samples were collected from 8 centers with an overall contamination rate of 7.9%.•Contamination was high after CDI infusions and significantly reduced after cleaning. |
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ISSN: | 1075-9964 1095-8274 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.anaerobe.2022.102617 |