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Increased environmental sample area and recovery of Clostridium difficile spores from hospital surfaces by quantitative PCR and enrichment culture.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Brown, KA; MacDougall, LK; Valenta, K; Simor, A; Johnstone, J; Mubareka, S; Broukhanski, G; Garber, G; McGeer, A; Daneman, N
Published in: Infection control and hospital epidemiology
August 2018

Clostridium difficile spores play an important role in transmission and can survive in the environment for several months. Optimal methods for measuring environmental C. difficile are unknown. We sought to determine whether increased sample surface area improved detection of C. difficile from environmental samples.Samples were collected from 12 patient rooms in a tertiary-care hospital in Toronto, Canada.Samples represented small surface-area and large surface-area floor and bedrail pairs from single-bed rooms of patients with low (without prior antibiotics), medium (with prior antibiotics), and high (C. difficile infected) shedding risk. Presence of C. difficile in samples was measured using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) with targets on the 16S rRNA and toxin B genes and using enrichment culture.Of the 48 samples, 64·6% were positive by 16S qPCR (geometric mean, 13·8 spores); 39·6% were positive by toxin B qPCR (geometric mean, 1·9 spores); and 43·8% were positive by enrichment culture. By 16S qPCR, each 10-fold increase in sample surface area yielded 6·6 times (95% CI, 3·2-13) more spores. Floor surfaces yielded 27 times (95% CI, 4·9-181) more spores than bedrails, and rooms of C. difficile-positive patients yielded 11 times (95% CI, 0·55-164) more spores than those of patients without prior antibiotics. Toxin B qPCR and enrichment culture returned analogous findings.Clostridium difficile spores were identified in most floor and bedrail samples, and increased surface area improved detection. Future research aiming to understand the role of environmental C. difficile in transmission should prefer samples with large surface areas.

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Published In

Infection control and hospital epidemiology

DOI

EISSN

1559-6834

ISSN

0899-823X

Publication Date

August 2018

Volume

39

Issue

8

Start / End Page

917 / 923

Related Subject Headings

  • Tertiary Care Centers
  • Spores, Bacterial
  • Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Patients' Rooms
  • Ontario
  • Multivariate Analysis
  • Humans
  • Hospitals
  • Equipment Contamination
  • Epidemiology
 

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Brown, K. A., MacDougall, L. K., Valenta, K., Simor, A., Johnstone, J., Mubareka, S., … Daneman, N. (2018). Increased environmental sample area and recovery of Clostridium difficile spores from hospital surfaces by quantitative PCR and enrichment culture. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, 39(8), 917–923. https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2018.103
Brown, Kevin Antoine, Laura K. MacDougall, Kim Valenta, Andrew Simor, Jennie Johnstone, Samira Mubareka, George Broukhanski, Gary Garber, Allison McGeer, and Nick Daneman. “Increased environmental sample area and recovery of Clostridium difficile spores from hospital surfaces by quantitative PCR and enrichment culture.Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology 39, no. 8 (August 2018): 917–23. https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2018.103.
Brown KA, MacDougall LK, Valenta K, Simor A, Johnstone J, Mubareka S, et al. Increased environmental sample area and recovery of Clostridium difficile spores from hospital surfaces by quantitative PCR and enrichment culture. Infection control and hospital epidemiology. 2018 Aug;39(8):917–23.
Brown, Kevin Antoine, et al. “Increased environmental sample area and recovery of Clostridium difficile spores from hospital surfaces by quantitative PCR and enrichment culture.Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, vol. 39, no. 8, Aug. 2018, pp. 917–23. Epmc, doi:10.1017/ice.2018.103.
Brown KA, MacDougall LK, Valenta K, Simor A, Johnstone J, Mubareka S, Broukhanski G, Garber G, McGeer A, Daneman N. Increased environmental sample area and recovery of Clostridium difficile spores from hospital surfaces by quantitative PCR and enrichment culture. Infection control and hospital epidemiology. 2018 Aug;39(8):917–923.
Journal cover image

Published In

Infection control and hospital epidemiology

DOI

EISSN

1559-6834

ISSN

0899-823X

Publication Date

August 2018

Volume

39

Issue

8

Start / End Page

917 / 923

Related Subject Headings

  • Tertiary Care Centers
  • Spores, Bacterial
  • Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Patients' Rooms
  • Ontario
  • Multivariate Analysis
  • Humans
  • Hospitals
  • Equipment Contamination
  • Epidemiology