Author: Cui, Qing-Qing; Yang, Jing; Sun, Su-Ju; Li, Zhi-Rong; Qiang, Cui-Xin; Niu, Ya-Nan; Li, Ru-Xin; Shi, Dong-Yan; Wei, Hong-Lian; Tian, Tian-Tian; Xu, Kai-Yue; Wang, Wei-Gang; Zhao, Jian-Hong
Title: Carriage of Clostridioides difficile in healthy infants in the community of Handan, China: A 1-year Follow-up Study. Cord-id: dxhterky Document date: 2020_11_24
ID: dxhterky
Snippet: OBJECTIVE Clostridioides difficile may colonize healthy infants and young children asymptomatically and for the long-term. C. difficile genotypes and the rate and determinants of colonization differ substantially and vary among countries and regions. A 1-year follow-up study was performed to determine the incidence, kinetics and influencing factors of C. difficile intestinal colonization. METHODS Twenty-nine healthy infants (14 girls and 15 boys) living at home with their parents in Handan City
Document: OBJECTIVE Clostridioides difficile may colonize healthy infants and young children asymptomatically and for the long-term. C. difficile genotypes and the rate and determinants of colonization differ substantially and vary among countries and regions. A 1-year follow-up study was performed to determine the incidence, kinetics and influencing factors of C. difficile intestinal colonization. METHODS Twenty-nine healthy infants (14 girls and 15 boys) living at home with their parents in Handan City were followed by survey from birth to 1 year of age, specifically from October 2014 through December 2015. C. difficile isolates were typed by PCR ribotyping and analyzed for the presence of toxin genes. RESULTS During the follow-up study period in the first year of life, 20 of the 29 total enrolled infants acquired C. difficile. A total of 437 fecal samples were obtained, and 111 (25.4%) samples contained C. difficile, including 79 (71.2%) toxigenic strains. The toxigenic isolates comprised six PCR ribotypes, and two PCR ribotypes were identified as nontoxigenic strains. CONCLUSION Our study showed that C. difficile colonization increase with age during the 12-month period, and the dominant toxigenic types of C. difficile isolates in infants were those involved in long-term colonization. Feeding patterns may affect the dynamic progress of C. difficile colonization.
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