• Intern Emerg Med · Oct 2023

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    A new score to predict Clostridioides difficile infection in medical patients: a sub-analysis of the FADOI-PRACTICE study.

    • Nicola Mumoli, Aldo Bonaventura, Chiara Marchesi, Marco Cei, Laura Morbidoni, Iginio Donatiello, Antonino Mazzone, and Francesco Dentali.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Ospedale Fornaroli, ASST Ovest Milanese, Magenta, MI, Italy. nimumoli@tiscali.it.
    • Intern Emerg Med. 2023 Oct 1; 18 (7): 200320092003-2009.

    AbstractMedical divisions are at high risk of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) due to patients' frailty and complexity. This sub-analysis of the FADOI-PRACTICE study included patients presenting with diarrhea either at admission or during hospitalization. CDI diagnosis was confirmed when both enzyme immunoassay and A and B toxin detection were found positive. The aim of this sub-analysis was the identification of a new score to predict CDI in hospitalized, medical patients. Five hundred and seventy-two patients with diarrhea were considered. More than half of patients was female, 40% on antibiotics in the previous 4 weeks and 60% on proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). CDI diagnosis occurred in 103 patients (18%). Patients diagnosed with CDI were older, more frequently of female sex, recently hospitalized and bed-ridden, and treated with antibiotics and PPIs. Through a backward stepwise logistic regression model, age > 65 years, female sex, recent hospitalization, recent antibiotic therapy, active cancer, prolonged hospital stay (> 12 days), hypoalbuminemia (albumin < 3 g/dL), and leukocytosis (white blood cells > 9 × 10^9/L) were found to independently predict CDI occurrence. These variables contributed to building a clinical prognostic score with a good sensitivity and a modest specificity for a value > 3 (79% and 58%, respectively; AUC 0.75, 95% CI 0.71-0.79, p < 0.001), that identified low-risk (score ≤ 3; 42.5%) and high-risk (score > 3; 57.5%) patients. Although some classical risk factors were confirmed to increase CDI occurrence, the changing landscape of CDI epidemiology suggests a reappraisal of common risk factors and the development of novel risk scores based on local epidemiology.© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Società Italiana di Medicina Interna (SIMI).

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