International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jul 2022)

Frequency of stool specimen collection and testing for Clostridioides difficile of hospitalized adults and long-term care facility residents with new-onset diarrhea in Louisville, Kentucky

  • Frederick J. Angulo,
  • Senén Peña Oliva,
  • Ruth Carrico,
  • Stephen Furmanek,
  • Joann Zamparo,
  • Elisa Gonzalez,
  • Sharon Gray,
  • Kimbal D. Ford,
  • David Swerdlow,
  • Jennifer C. Moïsi,
  • Julio Ramirez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 120
pp. 196 – 200

Abstract

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Objectives: This study aimed to determine the stool specimen collection and Clostridioides difficile (C. difficile) testing frequency from inpatients and long-term care facility (LTCF) residents with new-onset diarrhea. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in all wards of 9 adult hospitals (3532 beds) and 14 LTCFs (1205 beds) in Louisville, Kentucky to identify new-onset diarrhea (≥3 loose stools in the past 24 h and not present in the preceding 24 h) among Louisville adults via electronic medical record review, nurse interviews, and patient interviews during a 1–2 week observation period in 2018–2019. Results: Among Louisville-resident inpatients, 167 patients with 9731 inpatient-days had new-onset diarrhea (1.7/100 inpatient-days). Stool specimens were collected from 32% (53/167); 12 (23%) specimens were laboratory-confirmed for C. difficile infection (CDI) (12.3 cases/10,000 inpatient-days). Among LTCF residents, 63 with 10,402 LTCF resident-days had new-onset diarrhea (0.6/100 LTCF resident-days). Stool specimens were collected from 32% (20/63); 9 (45%) specimens were laboratory-confirmed for CDI (8.6 cases/10,000 LTCF resident-days). Conclusions: New-onset diarrhea was common among inpatients and LTCF residents. Only one-third of patients with new-onset diarrhea had a stool specimen collected and tested for C. difficile—indicative of a potential CDI underdiagnosis—although, further studies are needed to confirm the extent of CDI underdiagnosis.

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