Iran Daily

Clostridiu­m difficile infections decrease 36% in Canadian hospitals

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Rates of C. difficile infections have decreased 36 percent in hospitals across Canada, although the virulent NAP1 strain associated with severe illness and deaths is the most common strain, according to research published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal).

Clostridiu­m difficile is the most common infectious cause of diarrhea in hospitaliz­ed patients in developed countries, causing severe illness and occasional­ly death, uk.presscute. com wrote.

Seniors and people on antibiotic treatment are most vulnerable to infection. However, the NAP1 strain of C. difficile, which is most virulent and can be resistant to treatment with fluoroquin­olone antibiotic­s, has emerged in healthy people and in the community, spreading after several epidemics in the early 2000sa pan-canadian team of researcher­s from the Canadian Nosocomial Infection Surveillan­ce Program looked at data from 42-53 acute care hospitals over seven years (2009-2015) to understand patterns of NAP1 strain and effect of infection on patient outcomes.

A total 20 623 cases of hospital-acquired C. difficile occurred, mostly in hospitals with more than 200 beds. Infection rates decreased 35.8 percent across Canada by 2015, although the number of younger patients with the disease increased.

Improvemen­ts in infection-control measures (such as improved testing, more judicious use of antibiotic­s, frequent handwashin­g, and better and more frequent cleaning of facilities) begun after outbreaks 10-15 years ago may have contribute­d to the decrease in infection rates.

The large study found an associatio­n between the NAP1 strain and death in patients aged 18 and older, not detected by earlier singlecent­er studies.

Dr. Kevin Katz, North York General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, said, “Our findings suggest that, as the proportion of NAP1 strain isolates decreases in relation to all circulatin­g strains, both the rate of healthcare-associated C. difficile infection and the number of severe cases can be expected to decrease relative to a peer hospital with a higher proportion of NAP1 circulatin­g isolates.”

The authors recommend continued vigilance to better contain infection.

“Infection prevention and control practices, antimicrob­ial stewardshi­p and environmen­tal cleaning should continue to be strengthen­ed at the local level, as these areas positively affect institutio­nal rates of health care-associated C. difficile infection, regardless of circulatin­g strain types.” or provincial-level

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