Overprescribing of Certain Antibiotics Might Cause C Diff
The study comes at a time when—despite all the attention and health care resources being thrown at COVID-19—medical experts have begun to turn a wary eye toward bacteriological pathogens.
One of the steps hospitals and other health care providers wanting to contain the spread of Clostridioides difficile (C diff) should be to drastically curtail the prescribing of carbapenems and third- and fourth-generation cephalosporin antibiotics. Patients with C diff are almost twice as likely to have been given those medications, according to a
“Eligible studies were those conducted among adult hospital inpatients, measured exposure to individual antibiotics or antibiotic classes, included a comparison group and measured the occurrence of HCFA-CDI [healthcare facility-associated Clostridioides difficile infection] as an outcome,” the study states.
Investigators note that C diff is the leading cause of health care-acquired infections (HAIs) in modern industrialized nations and is the most common cause of diarrhea in health care facilities. Most of the data were collected from studies conducted in North American and Europe, and the risk that C diff poses may differ from one region to another. It will “depend on the local prevalence of strains that are resistant to the particular antibiotic and a certain degree of heterogeneity is therefore to be expected,” the study states.
What investigators call “modest associations” with C diff were also observed with “quinolones (predominantly fluoroquinolones), lincosamides (namely clindamycin), 2nd generation cephalosporins, and beta-lactamase inhibitor combination penicillin antibiotics.”
Investigators say that one of the limitations of their approach was that antibiotic prescribing and the onset of C diff were not always recorded in an adequate manner, so cause and effect were hard to track. “This could explain the associations found for antibiotics used to treat CDI such as vancomycin and metronidazole (glycopeptide and nitromidazole classes, respectively), although this could not be established in this review, and both are able to incite CDI,” the study states. “Future studies should clearly report the parameters of exposure measurement, including all sources of information on exposure, as it was often unclear particularly in studies with a longer exposure window whether in-hospital prescription only was recorded, or whether prescription in the community setting was included. Information on dose-response relationships is generally lacking and studies investigating the risk of HCF-CDI associated with the timing and duration of antibiotic exposure are needed.”
The study comes at a time when—despite all the attention and health care resources being thrown at COVID-19—medical experts have begun to turn a wary eye toward bacteriological pathogens. The recent launch of an effort by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to improve antibiotic overprescribing
As Arjun Srinivasan, MD, the CDC’s associate director for health care association infection prevention programs recently
C diff is one of the superbugs on the CDC’s
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