Background:
Clostridium Difficile infection (CDI) is considered a ward-based nosocomial infection, due to contagion among patients. Molecular
studies recently questioned ward-based contact for disease spread.
Objective:
To investigate whether it is plausible that CDI spread in San Martino Hospital of Genoa was due to a ward-based contact and patientto-
patient diffusion.
Methods:
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of CDI cases from April 2010 to March 2015. We referred to Hospital data set and
Admission Service. Multilevel modelling approach and ecological analysis were used to assess C. difficile infection risk according to
wards and time of occurrence. Six representative CD strains were ribotyped to assess a possible equivalence.
Results:
The assessment of 514 CDI cases showed that the risk of disease and rate of incidence in wards were independent, while frequency
of cases and number of wards involved exhibited a positive relationship, excluding the typical epidemic pattern of contagious
diffusion, i.e., many cases in few wards. The extra-binomial variability due to ward clustering was not significant, indicating
homogeneity in the probability of CDI occurrence across all wards. Three hundred sixty-eight patients changed ward, without
showing connection between the frequency of cases in new wards and incidence among new subjects. Trigonometric components
described a significant contribution of seasonality, with excess of CDI cases during the winter months. Molecular analysis showed
different ribotypes of CD strains from the same ward.
Conclusion:
From our results it seems unlikely that in our institution CDI occurrence is due to ward-based contact and inter-human contagion of
the organism