Background: Cases of Clostridiodes difficile infection (CDI) diagnosed after hospital discharge account for a substantial proportion of new infections. It is unclear whether post-discharge infections originate from hospital-based transmission.
Methods: This was a Retrospective cohort study at a tertiary-care cancer center (non-outbreak setting). For all laboratory-identified cases of CDI in 2015-2016, patients with post-discharge (PD) CDI within eight weeks of their hospital stay were included in the study. Isolates from PD-CDI cases and their CDI-positive unit-based contacts were first genotyped by multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Common strains were further examined by core genome sequencing (CGS) to evaluate transmission links.
Results: Of 173 cases examined by MLST, 50% of PD cases matched previous unit contacts. Next, 34 isolates, including 16 PD cases and their 18-unit contacts were examined by CGS. None were ≤3 single-nucleotide variants apart. Seventy percent of PD cases had in-hospital antibiotic exposure before CDI onset in the community.
Conclusion: Our study results suggest that symptomatic CDI cases are not a substantial source of transmission to PD cases. Frequent antibiotic exposure in post-discharge CDI cases is an important target for surveillance and stewardship efforts.
Keywords: Clostridium difficile; Genome sequencing; Post-discharge infection.
Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.