189. Risk Factors for the Progression from Clostridioides difficile Colonization to Infection: A Single-Center, Retrospective Case-Control Study
Sophia Chang, Deverick J Anderson, Michael E Yarrington, Nicholas A Turner

TL;DR
This study identifies antibiotic use as a key risk factor for progression from Clostridioides difficile colonization to infection.
Contribution
The study reveals that sustained high-risk antibiotic exposure increases risk of C. difficile infection.
Findings
High-risk antibiotic use in both pre-exposure and exposure periods strongly predicts CDI progression.
Antibiotic stewardship is critical for preventing CDI after colonization.
Interaction between antibiotic use periods was statistically significant.
Abstract
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) remains the leading cause of healthcare–associated infection. Patients colonized with toxigenic C. difficile are at an increased risk of developing CDI. Data remains limited on the distinct host and clinical characteristics that impact this risk of progression. We conducted a retrospective matched case-control study of adult patients (≥18 years) who underwent >1 two-step stool test for C. difficile within the Duke University Health System between 03/15/2020-12/31/2023. Cases were patients with C. difficile colonization (NAAT+/toxin-) who progressed to CDI (NAAT+/toxin+) within 90 days; controls were colonized patients who remained toxin-negative. Cases were matched to controls based on date of index testing (±1 year). Data collection included host/clinical characteristics during a 90-day “pre-exposure” period preceding index testing and a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Nosocomial Infections in ICU · Infection Control in Healthcare
