Impact of enteral feeding strategies on nosocomial Clostridioides difficile infection-induced diarrhea
Ghada Alasbly, Sara Alotaishan, Yasmin Algindan, Rabie Khattab

TL;DR
This study explores how different enteral feeding methods affect the severity of Clostridioides difficile infection-induced diarrhea in hospitalized patients.
Contribution
The study identifies continuous enteral feeding as a strategy associated with milder CDI-related diarrhea and better biochemical stability.
Findings
Continuous enteral feeding was strongly associated with milder diarrhea compared to intermittent feeding.
Continuous feeding stabilized sodium levels, while intermittent feeding correlated with elevated creatinine and reduced albumin/hemoglobin.
Over 90% of patients received antibiotics and proton pump inhibitors, highlighting the need for medication stewardship.
Abstract
Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is a leading cause of healthcare-associated diarrhea, associated with prolonged hospitalization, increased costs, and higher mortality. Diarrhea severity is influenced by host factors, biochemical markers, and nutritional support. Although enteral feeding is essential when oral intake is not feasible, the impact of feeding mode and system type on CDI-related diarrhea remains underexplored. This study examined associations between enteral feeding strategies and diarrhea severity, along with relevant biochemical markers and medication use, particularly antibiotics and proton pump inhibitors. A retrospective cross-sectional investigation was conducted on adult CDI patients across tertiary hospitals in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province (Jan 2020–May 2025). Of 97 records, 78 met inclusion criteria. Demographic, nutritional, and biochemical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Nosocomial Infections in ICU · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
