Cargando…

Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region

C. difficile is an endospore-forming pathogen, which is becoming a common cause of microbial health-care associated gastrointestinal disease in the United States. Both healthy and symptomatic patients can shed C. difficile spores into the environment, which can survive for long periods, being resist...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Simecka, Jerry W., Fulda, Kimberly G., Pulse, Mark, Lee, Joon-hak, Vitucci, John, Nguyen, Phung, Taylor, Patricia, Filipetto, Frank, Espinoza, Anna M., Sharma, Sushma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6695158/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31415582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220646
_version_ 1783443982715453440
author Simecka, Jerry W.
Fulda, Kimberly G.
Pulse, Mark
Lee, Joon-hak
Vitucci, John
Nguyen, Phung
Taylor, Patricia
Filipetto, Frank
Espinoza, Anna M.
Sharma, Sushma
author_facet Simecka, Jerry W.
Fulda, Kimberly G.
Pulse, Mark
Lee, Joon-hak
Vitucci, John
Nguyen, Phung
Taylor, Patricia
Filipetto, Frank
Espinoza, Anna M.
Sharma, Sushma
author_sort Simecka, Jerry W.
collection PubMed
description C. difficile is an endospore-forming pathogen, which is becoming a common cause of microbial health-care associated gastrointestinal disease in the United States. Both healthy and symptomatic patients can shed C. difficile spores into the environment, which can survive for long periods, being resistant to desiccation, heat, and disinfectants. In healthcare facilities, environmental contamination with C. difficile is a major concern as a potential source of exposure to this pathogen and risk of disease in susceptible patients. Although hospital-acquired infection is recognized, community-acquired infection is an increasingly recognized health problem. Primary care clinics may be a significant source of exposure to this pathogen; however, there are limited data about presence of environmental C. difficile within clinics. To address the potential for primary care clinics as a source of environmental exposure to virulent C. difficile, we measured the frequency of environmental contamination with spores in clinic examination rooms and hospital rooms in Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) area of Texas. The ribotypes and presence of toxin genes from some environmental isolates were compared. Our results indicate primary care clinics have higher frequencies of contamination than hospitals. After notification of the presence of C. difficile spores in the clinics and an educational discussion to emphasize the importance of this infection and methods of infection prevention, environmental contamination in clinics was reduced on subsequent sampling to that found in hospitals. Thus, primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent C. difficile, and recognition of this possibility can result in improved infection prevention, potentially reducing community-acquired C. difficile infections and subsequent disease.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6695158
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-66951582019-08-16 Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region Simecka, Jerry W. Fulda, Kimberly G. Pulse, Mark Lee, Joon-hak Vitucci, John Nguyen, Phung Taylor, Patricia Filipetto, Frank Espinoza, Anna M. Sharma, Sushma PLoS One Research Article C. difficile is an endospore-forming pathogen, which is becoming a common cause of microbial health-care associated gastrointestinal disease in the United States. Both healthy and symptomatic patients can shed C. difficile spores into the environment, which can survive for long periods, being resistant to desiccation, heat, and disinfectants. In healthcare facilities, environmental contamination with C. difficile is a major concern as a potential source of exposure to this pathogen and risk of disease in susceptible patients. Although hospital-acquired infection is recognized, community-acquired infection is an increasingly recognized health problem. Primary care clinics may be a significant source of exposure to this pathogen; however, there are limited data about presence of environmental C. difficile within clinics. To address the potential for primary care clinics as a source of environmental exposure to virulent C. difficile, we measured the frequency of environmental contamination with spores in clinic examination rooms and hospital rooms in Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) area of Texas. The ribotypes and presence of toxin genes from some environmental isolates were compared. Our results indicate primary care clinics have higher frequencies of contamination than hospitals. After notification of the presence of C. difficile spores in the clinics and an educational discussion to emphasize the importance of this infection and methods of infection prevention, environmental contamination in clinics was reduced on subsequent sampling to that found in hospitals. Thus, primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent C. difficile, and recognition of this possibility can result in improved infection prevention, potentially reducing community-acquired C. difficile infections and subsequent disease. Public Library of Science 2019-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6695158/ /pubmed/31415582 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220646 Text en © 2019 Simecka et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Simecka, Jerry W.
Fulda, Kimberly G.
Pulse, Mark
Lee, Joon-hak
Vitucci, John
Nguyen, Phung
Taylor, Patricia
Filipetto, Frank
Espinoza, Anna M.
Sharma, Sushma
Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region
title Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region
title_full Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region
title_fullStr Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region
title_full_unstemmed Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region
title_short Primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent Clostridium (now Clostridioides) difficile: An environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in Dallas-Fort Worth region
title_sort primary care clinics can be a source of exposure to virulent clostridium (now clostridioides) difficile: an environmental screening study of hospitals and clinics in dallas-fort worth region
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6695158/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31415582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220646
work_keys_str_mv AT simeckajerryw primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT fuldakimberlyg primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT pulsemark primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT leejoonhak primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT vituccijohn primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT nguyenphung primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT taylorpatricia primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT filipettofrank primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT espinozaannam primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion
AT sharmasushma primarycareclinicscanbeasourceofexposuretovirulentclostridiumnowclostridioidesdifficileanenvironmentalscreeningstudyofhospitalsandclinicsindallasfortworthregion