Increasing Risk of Relapse after Treatment... : Clinical Infectious Diseases (original) (raw)
Increasing Risk of Relapse after Treatment of Clostridium difficile Colitis in Quebec, Canada
- Jacques Pépin
- Marie-Eve Alary
- Louis Valiquette
- Evelyne Raiche
- Joannie Ruel
- Katalin Fulop
- Dominique Godin
- Claude Bourassa
Clinical Infectious Diseases
40(11):p 1591-1597, June 1, 2005.
| DOI: 10.1086/430315
Background
Clinicians who treat patients with _Clostridium difficile_-associated diarrhea (CDAD) in Quebec, Canada, have noted an apparent increase in the proportion of patients who experience relapse.
Methods
To determine whether there was an increase in the frequency of treatment failure and of recurrence of CDAD after treatment, we reviewed data on cases that had been diagnosed in a hospital in the province of Quebec during the period 1991–2004. The frequency of recurrences within 60 days after the initial diagnosis was measured using Kaplan-Meier analysis, and Cox regression was used for multivariate analysis.
Results
Among patients who had initially been treated with metronidazole, the proportion whose regimens were switched to vancomycin or for whom vancomycin was added because of a disappointing response did not vary between 1991 and 2002 (66 [9.6%] of 688 patients overall) but more than doubled in 2003–2004 (112 [25.7%] of 435; P<.001). Among 845 patients treated with metronidazole only, the 60-day probability of recurrence increased dramatically in 2003–2004 (47.2%), compared with 1991–2002 (20.8%; P<.001). During 1991–2002, the probabilities of recurrence were 20.0%, 13.8%, and 28.9% among individuals aged 0–17, 18–64, and ≥65 years, respectively; during 2003–2004, the probabilities were 25.0%, 27.1%, and 58.4%, respectively.
Conclusion
In 2003–2004, there was an increase in the proportion of patients with CDAD believed, by their attending physicians, to have experienced metronidazole treatment failure, as well as an increase in the frequency of post-metronidazole therapy recurrences, especially among elderly persons.
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