Effects of control interventions on Clostridium difficile infection in England: an observational study

Background: The control of Clostridium difficile infections is an international clinical challenge. The incidence of C difficile in England declined by roughly 80% after 2006, following the implementation of national control policies; we tested two hypotheses to investigate their role in this declin...

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Hauptverfasser: Dingle, KE, Didelot, X, Quan, TP, Eyre, DW, Stoesser, N, Golubchik, T, Harding, RM, Wilson, DJ, Griffiths, D, Vaughan, A, Finney, JM, Wyllie, DH, Oakley, SJ, Fawley, WN, Freeman, J, Morris, K, Martin, J, Howard, P, Gorbach, S, Goldstein, EJC, Citron, DM, Hopkins, S, Hope, R, Johnson, AP, Wilcox, MH, Peto, TEA, Walker, AS, Crook, DW, Modernising Medical Microbiology Informatics Group
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: The control of Clostridium difficile infections is an international clinical challenge. The incidence of C difficile in England declined by roughly 80% after 2006, following the implementation of national control policies; we tested two hypotheses to investigate their role in this decline. First, if C difficile infection declines in England were driven by reductions in use of particular antibiotics, then incidence of C difficile infections caused by resistant isolates should decline faster than that caused by susceptible isolates across multiple genotypes. Second, if C difficile infection declines were driven by improvements in hospital infection control, then transmitted (secondary) cases should decline regardless of susceptibility. Methods: Regional (Oxfordshire and Leeds, UK) and national data for the incidence of C difficile infections and antimicrobial prescribing data (1998–2014) were combined with whole genome sequences from 4045 national and international C difficile isolates. Genotype (multilocus sequence type) and fluoroquinolone susceptibility were determined from whole genome sequences. The incidence of C difficile infections caused by fluoroquinolone-resistant and fluoroquinolone-susceptible isolates was estimated with negative-binomial regression, overall and per genotype. Selection and transmission were investigated with phylogenetic analyses. Findings: National fluoroquinolone and cephalosporin prescribing correlated highly with incidence of C difficile infections (cross-correlations >0·88), by contrast with total antibiotic prescribing (cross-correlations
DOI:10.1016/S1473-3099(16)30514-X