[HTML][HTML] Reductions in intestinal Clostridiales precede the development of nosocomial Clostridium difficile infection

C Vincent, DA Stephens, VG Loo, TJ Edens, MA Behr… - Microbiome, 2013 - Springer
C Vincent, DA Stephens, VG Loo, TJ Edens, MA Behr, K Dewar, AR Manges
Microbiome, 2013Springer
Background Antimicrobial use is thought to suppress the intestinal microbiota, thereby
impairing colonization resistance and allowing Clostridium difficile to infect the gut.
Additional risk factors such as proton-pump inhibitors may also alter the intestinal microbiota
and predispose patients to Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). This comparative
metagenomic study investigates the relationship between epidemiologic exposures,
intestinal bacterial populations and subsequent development of CDI in hospitalized patients …
Background
Antimicrobial use is thought to suppress the intestinal microbiota, thereby impairing colonization resistance and allowing Clostridium difficile to infect the gut. Additional risk factors such as proton-pump inhibitors may also alter the intestinal microbiota and predispose patients to Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). This comparative metagenomic study investigates the relationship between epidemiologic exposures, intestinal bacterial populations and subsequent development of CDI in hospitalized patients. We performed a nested case–control study including 25 CDI cases and 25 matched controls. Fecal specimens collected prior to disease onset were evaluated by 16S rRNA gene amplification and pyrosequencing to determine the composition of the intestinal microbiota during the at-risk period.
Results
The diversity of the intestinal microbiota was significantly reduced prior to an episode of CDI. Sequences corresponding to the phylum Bacteroidetes and to the families Bacteroidaceae and Clostridiales Incertae Sedis XI were depleted in CDI patients compared to controls, whereas sequences corresponding to the family Enterococcaceae were enriched. In multivariable analyses, cephalosporin and fluoroquinolone use, as well as a decrease in the abundance of Clostridiales Incertae Sedis XI were significantly and independently associated with CDI development.
Conclusions
This study shows that a reduction in the abundance of a specific bacterial family - Clostridiales Incertae Sedis XI - is associated with risk of nosocomial CDI and may represent a target for novel strategies to prevent this life-threatening infection.
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