Kwon Jennie H, Lanzas Cristina, Reske Kimberly A, Hink Tiffany, Seiler Sondra M, Bommarito Kerry M, Burnham Carey-Ann D, Dubberke Erik R
1Division of Infectious Diseases,Washington University School of Medicine,St. Louis,Missouri.
2Department of Population Health and Pathobiology,North Carolina State University,Raleigh,North Carolina.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2016 Dec;37(12):1401-1407. doi: 10.1017/ice.2016.218. Epub 2016 Oct 3.
OBJECTIVE To determine whether Clostridium difficile is present in the food of hospitalized patients and to estimate the risk of subsequent colonization associated with C. difficile in food. METHODS This was a prospective cohort study of inpatients at a university-affiliated tertiary care center, May 9, 2011-July 12, 2012. Enrolled patients submitted a portion of food from each meal. Patient stool specimens and/or rectal swabs were collected at enrollment, every 3 days thereafter, and at discharge, and were cultured for C. difficile. Clinical data were reviewed for evidence of infection due to C. difficile. A stochastic, discrete event model was developed to predict exposure to C. difficile from food, and the estimated number of new colonization events from food exposures per 1,000 admissions was determined. RESULTS A total of 149 patients were enrolled and 910 food specimens were obtained. Two food specimens from 2 patients were positive for C. difficile (0.2% of food samples; 1.3% of patients). Neither of the 2 patients was colonized at baseline with C. difficile. Discharge colonization status was available for 1 of the 2 patients and was negative. Neither was diagnosed with C. difficile infection while hospitalized or during the year before or after study enrollment. Stochastic modeling indicated contaminated hospital food would be responsible for less than 1 newly colonized patient per 1,000 hospital admissions. CONCLUSIONS The recovery of C. difficile from the food of hospitalized patients was rare. Modeling suggests hospital food is unlikely to be a source of C. difficile acquisition. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2016;1401-1407.
目的 确定艰难梭菌是否存在于住院患者的食物中,并评估与食物中艰难梭菌相关的后续定植风险。方法 这是一项针对一所大学附属医院三级医疗中心住院患者的前瞻性队列研究,时间为2011年5月9日至2012年7月12日。入选患者每餐提交一部分食物。在入选时、此后每3天以及出院时收集患者粪便标本和/或直肠拭子,并进行艰难梭菌培养。查阅临床数据以寻找艰难梭菌感染的证据。建立了一个随机离散事件模型来预测食物中艰难梭菌的暴露情况,并确定每1000例入院患者因食物暴露导致的新定植事件估计数。结果 共纳入149例患者,获得910份食物标本。2例患者的2份食物标本艰难梭菌检测呈阳性(占食物样本的0.2%;占患者的1.3%)。这2例患者在基线时均未被艰难梭菌定植。2例患者中有1例可获得出院时的定植状态,结果为阴性。在住院期间或研究入选前或后的一年内,2例患者均未被诊断为艰难梭菌感染。随机模型表明,每1000例入院患者中,受污染的医院食物导致新定植患者少于1例。结论 从住院患者食物中检出艰难梭菌的情况罕见。模型显示医院食物不太可能是艰难梭菌感染的来源。《感染控制与医院流行病学》2016年;1401 - 1407页