Fidaxomicin treatment for Clostridioides difficile infection in patients with inflammatory bowel disease

Author:

Koop Andree H1ORCID,Travers Paul M2ORCID,Khanna Sahil3,Pardi Darrell S3,Farraye Francis A1,Hashash Jana G14

Affiliation:

1. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Mayo Clinic Jacksonville Florida USA

2. Division of Community Internal Medicine Mayo Clinic Jacksonville Florida USA

3. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

4. Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology American University of Beirut Beirut Lebanon

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimAlthough fidaxomicin is an effective first‐line treatment for Clostridioides difficile infection, it has not been well studied in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of fidaxomicin for the treatment of C. difficile infection in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.MethodsThis was a multicenter retrospective study of adults with inflammatory bowel disease and C. difficile infection treated with fidaxomicin with at least 3 months of follow up. The primary outcomes were treatment response, defined as resolution of C. difficile infection‐attributed diarrhea and/or negative C. difficile infection stool test, and time to C. difficile infection recurrence after fidaxomicin.ResultsThirty‐three patients (median age 42 years; 60.6% female) were included. Most patients had ulcerative colitis (26, 78.8%), were receiving treatment with a biologic or small molecule medication (19, 57.6%), and had a prior episode of C. difficile infection (26, 78.8%, median 2 episodes, range 0–15). Fidaxomicin led to resolution of C. difficile infection in 20 (60.6%) patients, with 6/20 (30.0%) developing a recurrence at a median of 55 days. Most patients who failed to respond to fidaxomicin underwent fecal microbiota transplantation (10/13, 76.9%) with resolution.ConclusionsIn this cohort of patients with inflammatory bowel disease and C. difficile infection, 60.6% responded to treatment with fidaxomicin. Of those who did not respond, fecal microbiota transplantation was an effective therapy.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology,Hepatology

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