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Recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection can be predicted using inflammatory mediator and toxin activity levels

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2020

Jonathan Motyka
Affiliation:
University of Michigan Medical School
Aline Penkevich
Affiliation:
University of Michigan Medical School
Vincent Young
Affiliation:
University of Michigan Medical School
Krishna Rao
Affiliation:
University of Michigan
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Abstract

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Background:Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) frequently recurs after initial treatment. Predicting recurrent CDI (rCDI) early in the disease course can assist clinicians in their decision making and improve outcomes. However, predictions based on clinical criteria alone are not accurate and/or do not validate other results. Here, we tested the hypothesis that circulating and stool-derived inflammatory mediators predict rCDI. Methods: Consecutive subjects with available specimens at diagnosis were included if they tested positive for toxigenic C. difficile (+enzyme immunoassay [EIA] for glutamate dehydrogenase and toxins A/B, with reflex to PCR for the tcdB gene for discordants). Stool was thawed on ice, diluted 1:1 in PBS with protease inhibitor, centrifuged, and used immediately. A 17-plex panel of inflammatory mediators was run on a Luminex 200 machine using a custom antibody-linked bead array. Prior to analysis, all measurements were normalized and log-transformed. Stool toxin activity levels were quantified using a custom cell-culture assay. Recurrence was defined as a second episode of CDI within 100 days. Ordination characterized variation in the panel between outcomes, tested with a permutational, multivariate ANOVA. Machine learning via elastic net regression with 100 iterations of 5-fold cross validation selected the optimal model and the area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AuROC) was computed. Sensitivity analyses excluding those that died and/or lived >100 km away were performed. Results: We included 186 subjects, with 95 women (51.1%) and average age of 55.9 years (±20). More patients were diagnosed by PCR than toxin EIA (170 vs 55, respectively). Death, rCDI, and no rCDI occurred in 32 (17.2%), 36 (19.4%), and 118 (63.4%) subjects, respectively. Ordination revealed that the serum panel was associated with rCDI (P = .007) but the stool panel was not. Serum procalcitonin, IL-8, IL-6, CCL5, and EGF were associated with recurrence. The machine-learning models using the serum panel predicted rCDI with AuROCs between 0.74 and 0.8 (Fig. 1). No stool inflammatory mediators independently predicted rCDI. However, stool IL-8 interacted with toxin activity to predict rCDI (Fig. 2). These results did not change significantly upon sensitivity analysis. Conclusions: A panel of serum inflammatory mediators predicted rCDI with up to 80% accuracy, but the stool panel alone was less successful. Incorporating toxin activity levels alongside inflammatory mediator measurements is a novel, promising approach to studying stool-derived biomarkers of rCDI. This approach revealed that stool IL-8 is a potential biomarker for rCDI. These results need to be confirmed both with a larger dataset and after adjustment for clinical covariates.

Funding: None

Disclosure: Vincent Young is a consultant for Bio-K+ International, Pantheryx, and Vedanta Biosciences.

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© 2020 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved.