Emerging Infectious Diseases (May 2023)

Misdiagnosis of Clostridioides difficile Infections by Standard-of-Care Specimen Collection and Testing among Hospitalized Adults, Louisville, Kentucky, USA, 2019–2020

  • Julio A. Ramirez,
  • Frederick J. Angulo,
  • Ruth M. Carrico,
  • Stephen Furmanek,
  • Senén Peña Oliva,
  • Joann M. Zamparo,
  • Elisa Gonzalez,
  • Pingping Zhang,
  • Leslie A. Wolf Parrish,
  • Subathra Marimuthu,
  • Michael W. Pride,
  • Sharon Gray,
  • Cátia S. Matos Ferreira,
  • Forest W. Arnold,
  • Raul E. Istúriz,
  • Nadia Minarovic,
  • Jennifer C. Moïsi,
  • Luis Jodar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2905.221618
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 5
pp. 919 – 928

Abstract

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Although Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) incidence is high in the United States, standard-of-care (SOC) stool collection and testing practices might result in incidence overestimation or underestimation. We conducted diarrhea surveillance among inpatients >50 years of age in Louisville, Kentucky, USA, during October 14, 2019–October 13, 2020; concurrent SOC stool collection and CDI testing occurred independently. A study CDI case was nucleic acid amplification test‒/cytotoxicity neutralization assay‒positive or nucleic acid amplification test‒positive stool in a patient with pseudomembranous colitis. Study incidence was adjusted for hospitalization share and specimen collection rate and, in a sensitivity analysis, for diarrhea cases without study testing. SOC hospitalized CDI incidence was 121/100,000 population/year; study incidence was 154/100,000 population/year and, in sensitivity analysis, 202/100,000 population/year. Of 75 SOC CDI cases, 12 (16.0%) were not study diagnosed; of 109 study CDI cases, 44 (40.4%) were not SOC diagnosed. CDI incidence estimates based on SOC CDI testing are probably underestimated.

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