Background
The gut microbiome may play an important role in the etiology and progression of colon cancer. The present hypothesis-testing study compared the colon cancer incidence rate among adults diagnosed with intestinal
Clostridioides
(formerly
Clostridium) difficile
(Cdiff) (the Cdiff cohort) to adults not diagnosed with intestinal Cdiff infection (the non-Cdiff cohort).
Methods
De-identified eligibility and claim healthcare records within the Independent Healthcare Research Database (IHRD) from a longitudinal cohort of adults (the overall cohort) enrolled in the Florida Medicaid system between 1990 through 2012 were examined. Adults with ≥ 8 outpatient office visits over 8 years of continuous eligibility were examined. There were 964 adults in the Cdiff cohort and 292,136 adults in the non-Cdiff cohort. Frequency and Cox proportional hazards models were utilized.
Results
Colon cancer incidence rate in the non-Cdiff cohort remained relatively uniform over the entire study period, whereas a marked increase was observed in the Cdiff cohort within the first 4 years of a Cdiff diagnosis. Colon cancer incidence was significantly increased (about 2.7-fold) in the Cdiff cohort (3.11 per 1,000 person-years) compared to the non-Cdiff cohort (1.16 per 1,000 person-years). Adjustments for gender, age, residency, birthdate, colonoscopy screening, family history of cancer, and personal history of tobacco abuse, alcohol abuse/dependence, drug abuse/dependence, and overweight/obesity, as well as consideration of diagnostic status for ulcerative and infection colitis, immunodeficiency, and personal history of cancer did not significantly change the observed results.
Conclusions
This is the first epidemiological study associating Cdiff with an increased risk for colon cancer. Future studies should further evaluate this relationship.