摘要
Once a nosocomial disease,Clostridium difficile infection(CDI)now appears frequently in the community in the absence of exposure to antibiotics.Prior studies have shown that patients with community-acquired CDI are younger,more likely to be female,and have fewer comorbidities compared to patients with hospital-associated CDI.Because most studies of CDI are hospitalbased,comparatively little is known about communityacquired CDI.The recent study by Chitnis has received widespread attention because it used active surveillance to capture all cases of community-acquired CDI within a large population and assessed key risk factors.The authors found that low-level healthcare exposure and proton pump inhibitor use were common among those with non-antibiotics associated,community-acquired CDI.In this commentary,we discuss the changing epidemiology of community-acquired CDI and the evidence basis for the controversial association between proton pump inhibitors and community-acquired CDI.
Once a nosocomial disease, Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) now appears frequently in the community in the absence of exposure to antibiotics. Prior studies have shown that patients with community-acquired CDI are younger, more likely to be female, and have fewer comorbidities compared to patients with hospital-associated CDI. Because most studies of CDI are hospital-based, comparatively little is known about community-acquired CDI. The recent study by Chitnis has received widespread attention because it used active surveillance to capture all cases of community-acquired CDI within a large population and assessed key risk factors. The authors found that low-level healthcare exposure and proton pump inhibitor use were common among those with non-antibiotics associated, community-acquired CDI. In this commentary, we discuss the changing epidemiology of community-acquired CDI and the evidence basis for the controversial association between proton pump inhibitors and community-acquired CDI.
基金
Supported by National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases T32 DK083256-0 to Freedberg DE
a National Cancer Institute Career Development Award K07 CA 132892 to Abrams JA