Affiliation:
1. Southern California Permanente Medical Group, North Hollywood
2. Southern California Permanente Medical Group, Los Angeles, California
3. Microbiology Specialists Inc., Houston, Texas
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The incidence of
Clostridium difficile
infection (CDI) has risen almost 3-fold in the United States over the past decade, emphasizing the need for rapid and accurate tests for CDI. The Cepheid Xpert
C. difficile
assay is an integrated, closed, nucleic acid amplification system that automates sample preparation and real-time PCR detection of the toxin B gene (
tcdB
). A total of 432 stool specimens from symptomatic patients were tested by a glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) assay, a toxin A and B enzyme immunoassay (EIA), the Xpert
C. difficile
assay, and a cell culture cytotoxicity neutralization assay (CCCN). The results of these methods, used individually and in combination, were compared to those of toxigenic culture. Results for the Xpert
C. difficile
assay alone showed a sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value (NPV) of 94.4, 96.3, 84.0, and 98.8%, while the EIA alone gave corresponding values of 58.3, 94.7, 68.9, and 91.9%, respectively. An algorithm using the GDH assay and the EIA (plus the CCCN if the EIA was negative) showed corresponding values of 83.1, 96.7, 83.1, and 96.1%. The Xpert
C. difficile
assay was statistically superior to the EIA (
P
, <0.001 by Fisher's exact test) and to the GDH-EIA-CCCN algorithm (
P
, 0.0363). Combining the GDH and Xpert
C. difficile
assays lowered both the sensitivity and the NPV of the Xpert assay. The GDH-EIA-CCCN procedure required, on average, 2 days to complete testing on GDH-positive results, while testing by the Xpert
C. difficile
assay was completed, on average, in less than 1 h. Xpert
C. difficile
testing yielded the highest sensitivity and NPV, in the least amount of time, of the individual- and multiple-test algorithms evaluated in this study.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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