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Clostridium difficile infection: a surgical disease in evolution. | LitMetric

Clostridium difficile infection: a surgical disease in evolution.

J Gastrointest Surg

Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Medicine and Public Health, 600 Highland Avenue, H4/736 CSC, Madison, WI 53792-7375, USA.

Published: September 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies suggest a significant increase in Clostridium difficile colitis cases, but many lack proper data to support this rise.
  • Analysis of patients from 1990 to 2006 showed a linear increase in hospital admissions for C. difficile infections, from 14 cases in 1990 to 927 in 2006, with consistent rates of colectomy surgeries.
  • The rising number of admissions correlates with higher hospital, operative, and lab volumes, indicating a potential epidemic that necessitates immediate preventative measures.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Several recent publications suggest an increase in the incidence of Clostridium difficile colitis. However, such studies commonly lack denominators over which to index this rise. There is also concern in the literature that disease virulence is increasing.

Methods: Billing, admission, operative, and infection databases at a single tertiary care center identified patients admitted from 1990 to 2006 with a diagnosis of C. difficile infection. Grouped by era, case numbers were indexed against overall hospital, operative, and laboratory volumes. C. difficile colectomy cases were individually examined and analyzed.

Results: The number of hospitalized patients diagnosed with C. difficile colitis increased in a linear fashion during the study period (1990, 14 cases; 2006, 927 cases). The colectomy per C. difficile case ratio did not change over the study period (era 1, 0.17%; era 2, 0.20%; era 3, 0.16%). Thirteen patients underwent colectomy with 54% surviving. The increase in patients admitted with a diagnosis of C. difficile was significantly associated with hospital volume (p = 0.04), operative volume (p < 0.001), and lab testing volume (p = 0.008).

Conclusion: The number of C. difficile patients admitted to our hospital is rising at an alarming rate. This reflects national trends and urgent action seems warranted to prevent a C. difficile epidemic.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11605-008-0569-9DOI Listing

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