Clostridioides difficile (C. difficile) is the most common healthcare-associated pathogen, causing \>500,000 infections and \>29,000 deaths per year in the US. Traditional approaches to reduce hospital-onset CDI focus on identifying, isolating, and treating symptomatic patients to prevent transmission to other patients. Recent genomic epidemiology studies, however, suggest that most hospital-onset CDI cases are attributable to asymptomatic carriers who either progress from colonization to active infection themselves or transmit C. difficile to other patients while asymptomatic. This trial will evaluate an intervention to pre-emptively identify asymptomatic C. difficile carriers and then implement a patient-tailored prevention package to protect the carrier from progression to active infection and to prevent transmission from the carrier to other patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
300
Patients colonized with toxigenic C. difficile, identified by testing routinely collected swabs for vancomycin-resistant enterococcus screening, will receive standard of care.
Patients colonized with toxigenic C. difficile, identified by testing routinely collected swabs for vancomycin-resistant enterococcus screening, will receive a preemptive prevention bundle for C. difficile. The prevention bundle will include enhanced room cleaning, C. difficile precautions (staff entering room must wear gown and gloves and wash hands with soap and water upon exiting the room), pharmacist review and optimization of antibiotics and antacids, and consideration of vancomycin prophylaxis.
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGRisk of C. difficile infection among patients colonized with C. difficile comparing the intervention to the control group
Incidence rate ratio of CDI in colonized patients who received the intervention bundle versus who did not receive the intervention bundle
Time frame: 24 months
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