Clostridium difficile in pediatric populations Flashcards
Where is clostridium difficile found?
- Soil
- Hospital environments
- Child care facilities
- Nursing homes
What is the primary mode of transmission?
Person-to-person spread by the fecal-oral route
What are the rates of asymptomatic carriers in children?
- 15-63% neonates
- 3-33% infants and toddler <2yo
- 8.3% older children >2yo
Why do infants and young children rarely develop symptoms?
- Immature surface receptors for C. diff
2. Protection by maternal antibodies acquired transplacentally or in breast milk
What is the incubation period of C. diff from exposure to onset of symptoms?
Median 2-3 days
What are risk factors for pediatric C. difficile infection?
- Duration of hospital stay
- Older age
- Exposure to multiple antibiotic classes
- Anti-microbial use
- Chemotherapy
- Immunosuppression esp. HIV
- IBD
- Hypogammaglobulinemia
- GI surgery
- Manipulation of the GI tract including tube feeding
What is the rate of recurrent infection with C. diff?
~25%
What pathophysiologic features of C. diff make it more virulent?
- Heat resistant spores
- Acid restistant spores
- Toxin A (enterotoxin) production to disrupt neuronal function and cause aberrant release of calcium
- Toxin B (cytotoxin) production altering chemotaxis of neutrophils, activation of macrophages and mast cells, and induction of inflammatory mediator release
Toxin production –> fluid secretion, mucosal damage, interstitial inflammation
What are the clinical features of mild C difficile?
- Watery diarrhea with fewer than four abnormal stools per day
- No systemic toxicity
What are the clinical features of moderate C. difficile?
- Four or more abnormal watery diarrheal stools per day
- No systemic toxicity
- Mild abdominal pain?
- Low grade fever?
What are the clinical features of severe C. difficile disease?
- Evidence of systemic toxicity e.g. high grade fver, rigors
- Abdominal pain
- Leukocytosis
- Progressively severe diarrhea containing blood, mucus, and leukocytes
What are some complications of severe C. difficile (aka pseudomembranous colitis)?
- Hypotension
- Shock
- Peritonitis
- Ileus
- Toxic megacolon
- Intestinal perforation
Which children are more likely to have complications with C. difficile infection?
- Neutropenic children w/ hematological malignancies
- HSCT
- Hirschprung’s disease
- IBD
What tests are available for diagnosis of C. difficile?
- Enzyme immunoassay (IA) for glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) - (present in almost all strains of C. diff incld. strains that do not produce toxin)
- EIA for toxins A and B
- Cell cytotoxin assay - cytotoxicity of stool for human foreskin fibroblast cells
- Clostridium difficile culture (sensitivity 95%, low specificity, long turnaround time)
What are strategies to prevent C. difficile infection?
- Meticulous hand hygiene with soap and water (alcohol-based hand hygiene products do NOT kill C. diff)
- Identifying and removing environmental sources of C. difficile
- Use chlorine-containing or other sporicidal cleaning agents to eliminate environmental contamination in areas associated with increased rates of CDI outbreaks
- Use of private rooms or cohorting
- Do not retest stools once symptoms abate
- Isolate patients based on symptoms alone
- Antimicrobial stewardship initiatives
- Probiotics (insufficient evidence)