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Clostridium difficile PCR Ribotype 078: an Emerging Strain in Humans and in Pigs?
Author(s) -
Abraham Goorhuis,
S. B. Debast,
L.A.M.G. van Leengoed,
Céline Harmanus,
Daan W. Notermans,
Aldert A. Bergwerff,
Ed J. Kuijper
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of clinical microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.349
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1070-633X
pISSN - 0095-1137
DOI - 10.1128/jcm.01536-07
Subject(s) - clostridium difficile , microbiology and biotechnology , clostridiaceae , biology , strain (injury) , clostridium , clostridiales , ribotyping , polymerase chain reaction , virology , gene , bacteria , genetics , antibiotics , toxin , anatomy
In a recent paper, Keel and colleagues concluded that Clos- tridium difficile PCR ribotype 078 was the most common PCR ribotype among isolates from swine (83% of 119 isolates) and isolates from calves (94% of 33 isolates) in The United States (1). In contrast, only 1 of 23 human isolates collected from two hospitals belonged to type 078. The recent finding of Songer et al. that type 078 is frequently found in meat products suggests that transmission from animals to humans is possible (J. G. Songer, H. T. Trinh, A. D. Thompson, G. E. Killgore, L. C. McDonald, and B. M. Limbago, presented at the Second In- ternational Clostridium difficile Symposium, Maribor, Slovenia, 6 to 9 June 2007). Our results from The Netherlands are in agreement with the hypothesis and indicate that C. difficile type 078 is of more clinical importance than was reported by Keel and colleagues (1). In a 2-month period in 2005, 17 hospitals participated in a surveillance study of the incidence of Clostridium difficile-as- sociated diarrhea (CDAD) in The Netherlands (2). PCR type 078 was found in 5 out of 67 (7.5%) CDAD patients and represented the third most frequently occurring type, after type 027 (16%) and type 014 (16%). In 2006, a surveillance study in a 982-bed hospital located in Amersfoort revealed 105 patients with CDAD, where type 078 was present in 3 patients (3.9%). In 2007, we performed a surveillance study in a 1,004- bed hospital in Zwolle and found type 078 to be present in 5 out of 47 patients (10.6%). All 13 type 078 isolates belonged to toxinotype V, contained the genes tcdA and tcdB, were binary toxin positive, and had a 39-bp deletion in tcdC. The average age of 13 patients was 63 years, ranging from 8 to 85 years, and all had one or more comorbid conditions. A health care onset was observed in 6 (46%) patients and a community onset in 7 (54%) patients, 3 of whom had been discharged in the 3 months prior to the onset of CDAD (health care association) and 4 of whom had not previously been admitted to a health care facility (community association). Severe diarrhea was present in nine patients (69%). Two patients died within 30 days of diagnosis, one death (8%) being attributable to CDAD. In accordance with the findings of Keel and coworkers, we also found C. difficile ribotype 078 in pigs, but in our case, this ribotype was exclusive and was found only in diarrheal neona- tal piglets in 6 out of 12 diseased and sampled litters (S. B. Debast, L. A. M. G. van Leengoed, C. Harmanus, E. J. Kui- jper, and A. B. Bergwerff, submitted for publication). At the pathological investigation, these animals typically showed co- litis. Like our hospital isolates, piglet-derived C. difficile ri- botype 078 contained the genes tcdA and tcdB, were binary toxin positive, and had a 39-bp deletion in tcdC. We conclude that C. difficile PCR ribotype 078 is a fre- quently encountered pathogen of CDAD in the human popu- lation in The Netherlands, represented mainly as a community onset disease. Since type 078 is also found as an important pathogen of CDAD in pigs, studies are currently ongoing to investigate this association in more detail.

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