PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Epidemiology of Clostridium difficile in infants in Oxfordshire, UK: Risk factors for colonization and carriage, and genetic overlap with regional C. difficile infection strains.

  • Nicole Stoesser,
  • David W Eyre,
  • T Phuong Quan,
  • Heather Godwin,
  • Gemma Pill,
  • Emily Mbuvi,
  • Alison Vaughan,
  • David Griffiths,
  • Jessica Martin,
  • Warren Fawley,
  • Kate E Dingle,
  • Sarah Oakley,
  • Kazimierz Wanelik,
  • John M Finney,
  • Melina Kachrimanidou,
  • Catrin E Moore,
  • Sherwood Gorbach,
  • Thomas V Riley,
  • Derrick W Crook,
  • Tim E A Peto,
  • Mark H Wilcox,
  • A Sarah Walker,
  • Modernising Medical Microbiology Informatics Group (MMMIG)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182307
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. e0182307

Abstract

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BackgroundApproximately 30-40% of children MethodsPredominantly healthy infants (≤2 years) were recruited in Oxfordshire, UK, and provided ≥1 fecal samples. Independent risk factors for toxigenic/non-toxigenic C. difficile colonization and acquisition were identified using multivariable regression. Infant C. difficile isolates were whole-genome sequenced to assay genetic diversity and prevalence of toxin-associated genes, and compared with sequenced strains from Oxfordshire CDI cases.Results338/365 enrolled infants provided 1332 fecal samples, representing 158 C. difficile colonization or carriage episodes (107[68%] toxigenic). Initial colonization was associated with age, and reduced with breastfeeding but increased with pet dogs. Acquisition was associated with older age, Caesarean delivery, and diarrhea. Breastfeeding and pre-existing C. difficile colonization reduced acquisition risk. Overall 13% of CDI C. difficile strains were genetically related to infant strains. 29(18%) infant C. difficile sequences were consistent with recent direct/indirect transmission to/from Oxfordshire CDI cases (≤2 single nucleotide variants [SNVs]); 79(50%) shared a common origin with an Oxfordshire CDI case within the last ~5 years (0-10 SNVs). The hypervirulent, epidemic ST1/ribotype 027 remained notably absent in infants in this large study, as did other lineages such as STs 10/44 (ribotype 015); the most common strain in infants was ST2 (ribotype 020/014)(22%).ConclusionsIn predominantly healthy infants without significant healthcare exposure C. difficile colonization and acquisition reflect environmental exposures, with pet dogs identified as a novel risk factor. Genetic overlap between some infant strains and those isolated from CDI cases suggest common community reservoirs of these C. difficile lineages, contrasting with those lineages found only in CDI cases, and therefore more consistent with healthcare-associated spread.