Organism burden, toxin concentration, and lactoferrin concentration do not distinguish between clinically significant and nonsignificant diarrhea in patients with Clostridium difficile.

Journal: Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease
PMID:

Abstract

Clostridium difficile infection is often overdiagnosed in patients with mild diarrhea. We evaluated 4 biomarkers as surrogates for clinically significant diarrhea (≥ 3 episodes in 24 hours) in 59 PCR-positive patients with and 59 PCR-positive patients without clinically significant diarrhea. Organism burden (median tcdB cycle threshold value, 26.9 versus 27.1, P=0.25) and toxin A and B concentrations (toxin A, median, 0 versus 0 ng/mL, P=0.42; toxin B, median, 0 versus 0 ng/mL, P=0.25) were not significantly different between patients with and without clinically significant diarrhea. Fecal lactoferrin concentrations were significantly increased in patients with clinically significant diarrhea (median, 99.0 versus 55.1 μg/mL, P=0.05); however, lactoferrin could not sufficiently classify patients into those with and without clinically significant diarrhea. Interventions that limit C. difficile testing to patients with clinically significant diarrhea are needed to improve the positive predictive value of C. difficile diagnostics.

Authors

  • Victoria Emma Anikst
    Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA, USA.
  • Rajiv Lochan Gaur
    Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA, USA.
  • Lee Frederick Schroeder
    Department of Pathology, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
  • Niaz Banaei
    Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA, USA; Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA, USA; Clinical Microbiology Laboratory, Stanford Health Care, CA, USA. Electronic address: nbanaei@stanford.edu.