Clostridium Difficile Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Admission Toxigenic C. Difficile Surveillance to Reduce Hospital Onset C. Difficile Infection (CDI)
Background: Clostridioides (formerly Clostridium) difficile Infection (CDI) is a persistent
healthcare issue. In the US, CDI is the most common infectious cause of hospital-onset (HO)
diarrhea.
Objective: Assess the impact of admission testing for toxigenic C. difficile colonization on
the incidence of clinical disease.
Design: Pragmatic stepped-wedge Infection Control initiative. Setting: NorthShore University
HealthSystem (NorthShore) is a four-hospital system near Chicago, Illinois.
Patients: All patients admitted to the four hospitals during the initiative. Interventions:
From September 2017 through August 2018 the investigators conducted a quality improvement
program where admitted patients had a peri-rectal swab tested for toxigenic C. difficile. All
colonized patients were placed in contact precautions.
Measurements: The investigators tested admissions who: i) had been hospitalized within two
months, ii) had a past C. difficile positive test, and/or iii) were in a long-term care
facility within six months. The investigators measured compliance with all other measures to
reduce the incidence of HO-CDI.
Limitations: This was not a randomized controlled trial, and multiple prevention
interventions were in place at the time of the admission surveillance initiative.
Background:
Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) remains a constant, even increasing, clinical infection
threat in the United States and Europe. New preventive strategies are urgently needed.
Current control measures do not target asymptomatic carriers, despite evidence that they can
contaminate the hospital environment and health care workers' hands; a risk to potentially
transmit C. difficile to other patients. Of special importance is that not only is disease
prevalence increasing, but severity of illness and mortality also is on the rise. The
investigators have implemented many interventions at our healthcare system including bleach
cleaning of rooms with CDI patients, monitoring of environmental services' room cleaning,
hand hygiene education and even UV light disinfection of rooms harboring CDI patients, and
none have been consistently effective. The investigators believe that CDI is much like
methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), in that many more patients are colonized
than infected, and one (perhaps the optimal) way to curtail disease is to interrupt
transmission by identifying carriers and placing them into contact (glove and gown)
precautions.
The investigators propose to test this hypothesis with a quality improvement program study at
NorthShore. The primary goal is to demonstrate that surveillance testing for C. difficile
colonization at the time of admission and contact precaution isolation of those positive will
reduce spread of the organism as well as lower clinical CDI. The investigators secondary
goals are to demonstrate a reduction in C. difficile infection incidence after implementation
of this program and demonstrate that such a program is cost effective.
Study Methods:
We have collected CDI disease rates for 10 years. One of our hospitals admits a high number
of patients from long term care facilities (LTCFs) and currently has a rate of infection at
11 cases/10,000 patient days, and this facility served as a pilot site in the program
initiative. The nosocomial CDI rate at this facility had been rising during the first quarter
of 2016. The investigators plan to introduce peri-rectal (intra-anal) swab testing for C.
difficile on all admissions accompanied by isolation of positive patients, which the
investigators hypothesize will lower the rate to 3 cases/10,000 patient days. In absolute
numbers, the goal is to reduce the rate from 4 nosocomial cases per month down to 1
nosocomial case per month. This is intended to provide a sample size that can demonstrate a
level of significance at p<.05 for disease reduction with the intervention when compared to
the same time frame prior to the admission testing intervention.
If the proposed pilot admission screening program is successful, the investigators will show
disease is reduced by implementing the admission screening program. At that point, if a
successful outcome is achieved, the program will be extended to all 4 hospitals in the
NorthShore system.
Additionally, the investigators will be collecting a double headed swab (Culturette) on all
patients, so those testing positive will have the second swab cultured for C. difficile. The
purpose of this is to validate the Roche C. Diff Cobas test as a valid screen testing
platform.
Study Period:
All admissions giving verbal consent to the target pilot hospital will be tested, and the
program will continue until at least 2,000 patients have taken part. The admitting nurses or
patient care technicians (PCTs) will collect the peri-rectal swab sample specimen. This
initial program began on July 1, 2016. The expected primary completion date for the pilot
program was December 31, 2016. The complete observation period for the full 4-hospital
initiative ended December 31, 2018.
Testing Plan:
Patients admitted to the target hospital will have a peri-rectal swab collected at the time
of admission. This will be tested by the Roche cobas C. Diff assay. The investigators will be
testing 6 days per week at the central hospital (Evanston Hospital).
Potential Benefit:
A report from Canada (using the BD assay) indicates the concept should work (reference 10
below) - the investigators believe the outcome will be better than or equal to the result of
this publication since isolation will include gowns as well as gloves. The investigators will
be the first US study to show admission testing works to provide a significant reduction in
healthcare-onset C. difficile infection (HO-CDI) and save patient lives.
Initial Supporting References:
1. Dallal RM, Harbrecht BG, Boujoukas AJ, et al. Fulminant Clostridium difficile: an
underappreciated and increasing cause of death and complications. Ann Surg
2002;235:363-72.
2. Dubberke ER, Reske KA, Olsen MA, McDonald LC, Fraser VJ. Short- and long-term
attributable costs of Clostridium difficile-associated disease in nonsurgical
inpatients. Clin Infect Dis 2008;46:497-504.
3. Kuijper EJ, Coignard B, Tull P. Emergence of Clostridium difficile-associated disease in
North America and Europe. Clin Microbiol Infect 2006;12 Suppl 6:2-18.
4. Loo VG, Poirier L, Miller MA, et al. A predominantly clonal multi-institutional outbreak
of Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea with high morbidity and mortality. N Engl J
Med 2005;353:2442-9.
5. McDonald LC, Owings M, Jernigan DB. Clostridium difficile infection in patients
discharged from US short-stay hospitals, 1996-2003. Emerg Infect Dis 2006;12:409-15.
6. Musher DM, Aslam S, Logan N, et al. Relatively poor outcome after treatment of
Clostridium difficile colitis with metronidazole. Clin Infect Dis 2005;40:1586-90.
7. Pepin J, Valiquette L, Alary ME, et al. Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea in a
region of Quebec from 1991 to 2003: a changing pattern of disease severity. CMAJ
2004;171:466-72.
8. Zacharioudakis IM, Zervou FN, Pliakos EE, Ziakas PD, Mylonakis E. Colonization with
toxinogenic C. difficile upon hospital admission, and risk of infection: a systematic
review and meta-analysis. Am J Gastroenterol 2015 Mar;110(3):381-90; quiz 391. doi:
10.1038/ajg.2015.22. Epub 2015 Mar 3.
9. Curry SR, Muto CA, Schlackman JL, Pasculle AW, Shutt KA, Marsh JW, Harrison LH. Use of
multilocus variable number of tandem repeats analysis genotyping to determine the role
of asymptomatic carriers in Clostridium difficile transmission. Clin Infect Dis 2013
Oct;57(8):1094-102. doi: 10.1093/cid/cit475. Epub 2013 Jul 23.
10. Longtin Y, Paquet-Bolduc B, Gilca R, Garenc C, Fortin E, Longtin J, Trottier S, Gervais
P, Roussy JF, Lévesque S, Ben-David D, Cloutier I, Loo VG. Effect of detecting and
isolating Clostridium difficile carriers at hospital admission on the incidence of C.
difficile infections: A quasi-experimental controlled study. JAMA Intern Med 2016 Apr
25. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.0177. [Epub ahead of print]
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