Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is an emerging but often understudied infectious disease in developing countries. This study was aimed to isolate and characterize C. difficile from shoe sole swabs and diarrheal patient's stool samples in Bangladesh. We collected 94 shoe sole swabs samples from urban communities in Dhaka and 208 diarrheal stool samples from hospitalized patients over a period of 4 months. Samples were incubated anaerobically for C. difficile growth, confirmed toxigenic, and PCR-ribotyped. Eleven of 94 (11.7%) shoe sole swabs and 4 of 208 (1.9%) stool samples were culture positive of which 9 shoe sole isolates were toxigenic. Six PCR ribotypes from the 9 toxigenic isolates were identified with ribotype F014-020 being the most common (n = 4; 44%). The recently identified ribotype 106 strain was also identified. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of C. difficile culture, isolation and characterization from environmental sources in Bangladesh.
Epidemiology of Clostridioides difficile (syn. Clostridium difficile) infection (CDI) in Bangladesh is poorly understood. This study assessed the epidemiology of CDI in hospitalized patients and hospital environmental contamination of toxigenic C. difficile at two large urban Bangladesh hospitals. This 12-month prospective observational cohort study collected stool samples from adults with diarrhea and recent antimicrobial exposure during 2017. Environmental samples were collected by swabbing surfaces of hospital common areas. Samples underwent toxigenic culture. C. difficile isolates were tested for toxins A and B and PCR-ribotyped. Of 208 stool samples, 18 (8.7%) were positive for toxigenic C. difficile. Of 400 environmental samples, 45 (11%) were positive for toxigenic C. difficile. Ribotypes present in ≥10% of stool isolates were 017 (38%), 053-163 (13%), and a novel ribotype (FP435 [13%]). Common ribotypes in environmental isolates were 017 (22%), 053-163 (11%), 106 (24%). This is the first report describing current epidemiology of CDI in at risk hospitalized adult patients in Bangladesh.
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