Clostridioides difficile
From IDWiki
Background
Microbiology
- Spore-forming, anaerobic, Gram-positive bacillus
Risk factors
- Antibiotic exposure, typically broad-spectrum antibiotics especially those with anaerobic coverage1
- Clindamycin
- Fluoroquinolones (especially with NAP1 strain)
- Cephalosporins
- Monobactams
- Carbapenems
- PPI use
Clinical Presentation
- Profuse watery diarrhea
Severity
Severity | Definition2 |
---|---|
Mild | WBC ≤15 AND creatinine ≤1.5 x baseline |
Severe, uncomplicated | WBC >15 OR creatinine >1.5 x baseline OR hypoalbuminemia |
Severe, complicated | Hypotension OR shock OR ileus OR megacolon |
Children
- Asymptomatic carriage is common in infants (37% at 1 month, decreasing to adult levels of 3-5% by 3 years) 3
- Thought to be related to a lack of the binding target of C. difficile toxin
- Clinical disease is rare before 12 to 24 months of age
Management
Severity | First-line2 | Alternatives |
---|---|---|
Initial episode | ||
Mild to moderate | Vancomycin 125 mg po QID for 10-14 days | Fidaxomicin 200 mg po BID for 10 days Metronidazole 500 mg po TID for 10-14 days |
Severe, uncomplicated | Vancomycin 125 mg po QID for 10-14 days Fidaxomicin 200 mg po BID for 10 days |
|
Severe, complicated | Vancomycin 125-500 mg po QID for 10-14 days plus metronidazole 500 mg IV q8h | Fidaxomicin 200 mg po BID for 10 days plus metronidazole 500 mg IV q8h Consider rectal vancomycin if ileus |
Recurrent episode | ||
First recurrence, mild to moderate | Vancomycin 125 mg po QID for 14 days | Fidaxomicin 200 mg po BID for 10 days |
First recurrence, severe, uncomplicated | Vancomycin 125 mg po QID for 14 days Fidaxomicin 200 mg po BID for 10 days |
|
Second or subsequent recurrence | Vancomycin as prolonged tapered or pulsed regimen | Consider fecal microbiota tranplantation after vancomycin |
- For rectal vancomycin, add 500 mg to 100 mL normal saline and give as retention enema every 6 hours
- A sample vancomycin taper: 125 mg po QID for 14 days, then 125 mg po TID for 7 days, then 125 mg po BID for 7 days, then 125 mg po daily for 7 days, then 125 mg po q2-3d for 2 to 8 weeks
Further Reading
- AMMI treatment practice guidelines for Clostridium difficile infection 2018
- Clostridioides difficile: diagnosis and treatments. BMJ. 2019;366:l4609. doi: 10.1136/bmj.l46091
References
- ^ Clostridium difficile Infection in Infants and Children. Pediatrics. 2012;131(1):196-200. doi:10.1542/peds.2012-2992.