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Patients Discharged From Hospitals Without a Clostridioides difficile Infection Increase the Risk of CDI in Family Members
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 November 2020
Abstract
Background:Clostridioides difficile infections (CDIs) present and are transmitted in both community and healthcare settings. Patients who become colonized or infected during hospitalization may be discharged into the community. Asymptomatic spread and/or community-based transmission have also been posited as alternative sources for healthcare-onset CDI cases. The objective of our study was to determine whether individuals are at greater risk for developing a CDI if they have a family member that spent time hospitalized in the prior 90 days, even if the hospitalized family member had no prior diagnosis of CDI. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using the Truven Marketscan database from 2001 through 2017; both commercial claims and Medicare supplemental data were included. We categorized enrollees by age, sex, month, year, exposure to a family member with CDI, hospitalization, or high- or low-risk antibiotic use in the prior 90 days. We then subdivided these groups based on the total amount of time that other family members spent hospitalized in the prior 90 days: ≤4 days, 5–10, 11–20, 21–30, 41–50 or >50 days. Within each subgroup, we computed the incidence of CDI. We then used a stratified regression model (log-linear quasi-Poisson) to estimate the incidence of CDI in each enrollment bin. Finally, we repeated our analysis using all CDI cases, CDI cases with no prior CDI in the family, and cases without prior hospitalization. Results: Over the 17-year study period, >5.1 billion enrollment months were represented in our dataset. We identified 224,818 cases of CDI, 223,744 cases without prior CDI in a family member and 164,650 CDI cases where the case patient had no prior hospitalization. Table 1 depicts the estimated risk (incident rate ratios) associated with the amount of time that other family members spent hospitalized in the prior 90 days. There is a very clear dose–response curve, and the relative risk for CDI increase as the amount of time other family members spent hospitalized increased. Other risk factors included prior hospitalization, low- and high-risk antibiotics, age, female sex and exposure to a family member with CDI. Conclusions: Having a family member who has been hospitalized in the prior 90 days significantly increases the risk for CDI, even if the family member did not have CDI. The total amount of time other family members spent in the hospital is positively associated with the level of risk.
Funding: CDC Modeling Infectious Diseases (MInD) in Healthcare Network
Disclosures: None
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- © 2020 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved.