Antibiotics (Aug 2022)

Metronidazole for Treatment of <i>Clostridioides difficile</i> Infections in Brazil: A Single-Center Experience and Risk Factors for Mortality

  • Joana Darc Freitas Alves,
  • Augusto Yamaguti,
  • João Silva de Mendonça,
  • Cristiano de Melo Gamba,
  • Cibele Lefreve Fonseca,
  • Daniela K. S. Paraskevopoulos,
  • Alexandre Inacio de Paula,
  • Nair Hosino,
  • Silvia Figueiredo Costa,
  • Thaís Guimarães

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11091162
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 1162

Abstract

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We describe the epidemiology of C. difficile infections (CDIs) focused on treatment and analyze the risk factors for mortality. This is a retrospective cohort study of CDI cases with a positive A/B toxin in the stool in 2017–2018. We analyzed the demographic data, comorbidities, previous use of antimicrobials, severity, and treatment, and we performed multivariate analysis to predict the 30-days mortality. We analyzed 84 patients, 37 (44%) of which were male, where the mean age was 68.1 years and 83 (99%) had comorbidities. The percentage of positivity of the A/B toxin was 11.6%, and the overall incidence density was 1.78/10,000 patient days. Among the patients, 65.4% had previous use of antimicrobials, with third-generation cephalosporins being the class most prescribed, and 22.6% of cases were severe. Treatment was prescribed for 70 (83.3%) patients, and there was no statistically significant difference between the initial treatment with metronidazole and vancomycin even in severe cases. The 30-day mortality was 7/84 (8.3%), and the risk factors associated with mortality was a severity score ≥2 (OR: 6.0; CI: 1.15–31.1; p = 0.03). In this cohort of CDI-affected patients with comorbidities and cancer, metronidazole was shown to be a good option for treating CDIs, and the severity score was the only independent risk factor for death.

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