Longitudinal genomic surveillance of carriage and transmission of Clostridioides difficile in an intensive care unit

Author:

Miles-Jay Arianna,Snitkin Evan S.ORCID,Lin Michael Y.,Shimasaki Teppei,Schoeny MichaelORCID,Fukuda Christine,Dangana Thelma,Moore NicholasORCID,Sansom Sarah E.ORCID,Yelin Rachel D.,Bell Pamela,Rao Krishna,Keidan Micah,Standke Alexandra,Bassis Christine,Hayden Mary K.,Young Vincent B.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractDespite enhanced infection prevention efforts, Clostridioides difficile remains the leading cause of healthcare-associated infections in the United States. Current prevention strategies are limited by their failure to account for patients who carry C. difficile asymptomatically, who may act as hidden reservoirs transmitting infections to other patients. To improve the understanding of asymptomatic carriers’ contribution to C. difficile spread, we conducted admission and daily longitudinal culture-based screening for C. difficile in a US-based intensive care unit over nine months and performed whole-genome sequencing on all recovered isolates. Despite a high burden of carriage, with 9.3% of admissions having toxigenic C. difficile detected in at least one sample, only 1% of patients culturing negative on admission to the unit acquired C. difficile via cross-transmission. While patients who carried toxigenic C. difficile on admission posed minimal risk to others, they themselves had a 24-times greater risk for developing a healthcare-onset C. difficile infection than noncarriers. Together, these findings suggest that current infection prevention practices can be effective in preventing nosocomial cross-transmission of C. difficile, and that decreasing C. difficile infections in hospitals further will require interventions targeting the transition from asymptomatic carriage to infection.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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