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Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients

The entire process of Clostridium difficile colonization to infection develops in large intestine. However, the real colonization pattern of C. difficile in preoperative colorectal cancer patients has not been studied. In this study, 33 C. difficile strains (16.1%) were isolated from stool samples o...

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Autores principales: Zheng, Yi, Luo, Yun, Lv, Yinxiang, Huang, Chen, Sheng, Qinsong, Zhao, Peng, Ye, Julian, Jiang, Weiqin, Liu, Lulu, Song, Xiaojun, Tong, Zhou, Chen, Wenbin, Lin, Jianjiang, Tang, Yi-Wei, Jin, Dazhi, Fang, Weijia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5355311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28060753
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14424
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author Zheng, Yi
Luo, Yun
Lv, Yinxiang
Huang, Chen
Sheng, Qinsong
Zhao, Peng
Ye, Julian
Jiang, Weiqin
Liu, Lulu
Song, Xiaojun
Tong, Zhou
Chen, Wenbin
Lin, Jianjiang
Tang, Yi-Wei
Jin, Dazhi
Fang, Weijia
author_facet Zheng, Yi
Luo, Yun
Lv, Yinxiang
Huang, Chen
Sheng, Qinsong
Zhao, Peng
Ye, Julian
Jiang, Weiqin
Liu, Lulu
Song, Xiaojun
Tong, Zhou
Chen, Wenbin
Lin, Jianjiang
Tang, Yi-Wei
Jin, Dazhi
Fang, Weijia
author_sort Zheng, Yi
collection PubMed
description The entire process of Clostridium difficile colonization to infection develops in large intestine. However, the real colonization pattern of C. difficile in preoperative colorectal cancer patients has not been studied. In this study, 33 C. difficile strains (16.1%) were isolated from stool samples of 205 preoperative colorectal cancer patients. C. difficile colonization rates in lymph node metastasis patients (22.3%) were significantly higher than lymph node negative patients (10.8%) (OR=2.314, 95%CI=1.023-5.235, P =0.025). Meanwhile, patients positive for stool occult blood had lower C. difficile colonization rates than negative patients (11.5% vs. 24.0%, OR=0.300, 95%CI=0.131-0.685, P =0.019). A total of 16 sequence types were revealed by multilocus sequence typing. Minimum spanning tree and time-space cluster analysis indicated that all C. difficile isolates were epidemiologically unrelated. Antibiotic susceptibility testing showed all isolates were susceptible to vancomycin and metronidazole. The results suggested that the prevalence of C. difficile colonization is high in preoperative colorectal cancer patients, and the colonization is not acquired in the hospital. Since lymph node metastasis colorectal cancer patients inevitably require adjuvant chemotherapy and C. difficile infection may halt the ongoing treatment, the call for sustained monitoring of C. difficile in those patients is apparently urgent.
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spelling pubmed-53553112017-04-26 Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients Zheng, Yi Luo, Yun Lv, Yinxiang Huang, Chen Sheng, Qinsong Zhao, Peng Ye, Julian Jiang, Weiqin Liu, Lulu Song, Xiaojun Tong, Zhou Chen, Wenbin Lin, Jianjiang Tang, Yi-Wei Jin, Dazhi Fang, Weijia Oncotarget Research Paper The entire process of Clostridium difficile colonization to infection develops in large intestine. However, the real colonization pattern of C. difficile in preoperative colorectal cancer patients has not been studied. In this study, 33 C. difficile strains (16.1%) were isolated from stool samples of 205 preoperative colorectal cancer patients. C. difficile colonization rates in lymph node metastasis patients (22.3%) were significantly higher than lymph node negative patients (10.8%) (OR=2.314, 95%CI=1.023-5.235, P =0.025). Meanwhile, patients positive for stool occult blood had lower C. difficile colonization rates than negative patients (11.5% vs. 24.0%, OR=0.300, 95%CI=0.131-0.685, P =0.019). A total of 16 sequence types were revealed by multilocus sequence typing. Minimum spanning tree and time-space cluster analysis indicated that all C. difficile isolates were epidemiologically unrelated. Antibiotic susceptibility testing showed all isolates were susceptible to vancomycin and metronidazole. The results suggested that the prevalence of C. difficile colonization is high in preoperative colorectal cancer patients, and the colonization is not acquired in the hospital. Since lymph node metastasis colorectal cancer patients inevitably require adjuvant chemotherapy and C. difficile infection may halt the ongoing treatment, the call for sustained monitoring of C. difficile in those patients is apparently urgent. Impact Journals LLC 2017-01-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5355311/ /pubmed/28060753 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14424 Text en Copyright: © 2017 Zheng et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Zheng, Yi
Luo, Yun
Lv, Yinxiang
Huang, Chen
Sheng, Qinsong
Zhao, Peng
Ye, Julian
Jiang, Weiqin
Liu, Lulu
Song, Xiaojun
Tong, Zhou
Chen, Wenbin
Lin, Jianjiang
Tang, Yi-Wei
Jin, Dazhi
Fang, Weijia
Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
title Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
title_full Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
title_fullStr Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
title_full_unstemmed Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
title_short Clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
title_sort clostridium difficile colonization in preoperative colorectal cancer patients
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5355311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28060753
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14424
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