Laboratory Medicine and Nosocomial Infections: Coping with Clostridium Difficile
|
By LabMedica International staff writers Posted on 19 Feb 2010 |
Sixth article in Laboratory Medicine and Nosocomial Infections series - A bacterium transmitted in hospitals, called Clostridium difficile, is found in the intestines where it can cause severe diarrhea and life-threatening intestinal conditions, such as pseudomembranous colitis (inflammation of the large intestine), toxic megacolon (extreme inflammation and distention of the colon), and sepsis (a condition in which the body fights a severe infection that has spread via the bloodstream), which can be fatal.
New products on the market that diagnose C. difficile have received clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA; Atlanta, GA, USA). These include products from Prodesse Inc. (Waukesha, WI, USA), BD Diagnostics, of Becton, Dickinson and Co (Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA), and Cepheid, (Sunnyvale, CA, USA).
The Health Protection Agency in the United Kingdom (HPA), which tracks deaths from C. difficile, reports that it is responsible for more deaths than the more widely known methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and that the death rate is increasing.
Many health care professionals maintain that the problem is compounded by the fact that more than 90% of US laboratories use immunoassay tests, which have been shown to be insensitive, with some testing below 50% compared to molecular testing.
"The previous lack of an accurate and rapid diagnostic test for C. difficile has greatly impeded our ability to halt the increasing rate of C. difficile, which has taken a severe turn in the past several years. Patients can have their first diarrhea symptoms on a Monday and be dead by Thursday," said Dale Gerding, MD, professor of medicine, division of infectious diseases, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine (IL, USA).
"Toxigenic culture offers high sensitivity, but laboratories find it burdensome and far too slow for practical diagnostic use. Instead, many use less labor-intensive toxin EIA [enzyme immunoassay] and GDH [glutamate dehydrogenase] tests, which fail to detect 20 to 50 % of cases," he explained. "From a practical standpoint, this means many patients are not subjected to proper isolation procedures that can curtail transmission of C. difficile."
In April 2009, Prodesse received approval from the FDA to sell its diagnostic ProGastro Cd, which detects toxic strains of C. difficile. The tool uses real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technology to produce a sensitive result on a stool sample in about three hours. Simple to use and with low inhibition, ProGastro Cd runs on a standard molecular instrument and fits easily into existing workflow.
In trials at three clinics, ProGastro Cd detected 43% more positives than did the current gold standard. Genetic sequencing confirmed that more than 90% of the additional positives detected by ProGastro Cd were accurate. In addition, the three clinical sites reported no inhibited samples--an important aspect because stools usually contain many PCR inhibitors.
In January 2009, BD Diagnostics received the FDA go-ahead to market GeneOhm--a molecular assay for the rapid detection of the Toxin B gene found in C. difficile. The GeneOhm assay targets the Toxin B gene, discovered in 1978, to be the cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and colitis and found in virtually all toxigenic C. difficile strains, including the emerging BI/NAP1/027 epidemic strain. It combines high sensitivity and specificity, and provides definitive test results in less than 2 hours.
"From our assay, you do not have to do a culture confirmation," Tobi Karchmer M.D., medical affairs director, BD Diagnostics (Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) said. "The hospital could start an infection control based on the assay."
Results can be obtained in 16 hours, a shorter time than the chromogenic incubation period of 18 to 24 hours and far shorter than the 48 hours required for a culture to give results.
Cepheid received FDA clearance in July 2009 for its Xpert C. difficile test, an on-demand molecular diagnostic test designed for 45-minute detection of the bacterium. Blue colonies on Cepheid's spectra plate represent a positive result for MRSA. The Xpert C. difficile test is Cepheid's seventh test to receive FDA clearance, and fourth in its expanding menu of on-demand HAI products. Cepheid will also continue to work closely with the FDA to deliver an additional product featuring simultaneous differentiation of the 027/NAP1/BI epidemic strain.
According to BD's Dr. Karchmer, before the advent of molecular testing, many physicians would ignore the results of the less sensitive tests if they did not confirm what the symptoms indicated.
"The clinicians would resend the test and order multiple tests," Karchmer says. "They didn't understand that ordering multiple tests using the same inaccurate method does not improve results. It doesn't help and is costly."
Related Links:
U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Prodesse Inc.
Becton, Dickinson and Co.
Cepheid
Health Protection Agency in the United Kingdom
University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine
New products on the market that diagnose C. difficile have received clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA; Atlanta, GA, USA). These include products from Prodesse Inc. (Waukesha, WI, USA), BD Diagnostics, of Becton, Dickinson and Co (Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA), and Cepheid, (Sunnyvale, CA, USA).
The Health Protection Agency in the United Kingdom (HPA), which tracks deaths from C. difficile, reports that it is responsible for more deaths than the more widely known methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and that the death rate is increasing.
Many health care professionals maintain that the problem is compounded by the fact that more than 90% of US laboratories use immunoassay tests, which have been shown to be insensitive, with some testing below 50% compared to molecular testing.
"The previous lack of an accurate and rapid diagnostic test for C. difficile has greatly impeded our ability to halt the increasing rate of C. difficile, which has taken a severe turn in the past several years. Patients can have their first diarrhea symptoms on a Monday and be dead by Thursday," said Dale Gerding, MD, professor of medicine, division of infectious diseases, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine (IL, USA).
"Toxigenic culture offers high sensitivity, but laboratories find it burdensome and far too slow for practical diagnostic use. Instead, many use less labor-intensive toxin EIA [enzyme immunoassay] and GDH [glutamate dehydrogenase] tests, which fail to detect 20 to 50 % of cases," he explained. "From a practical standpoint, this means many patients are not subjected to proper isolation procedures that can curtail transmission of C. difficile."
In April 2009, Prodesse received approval from the FDA to sell its diagnostic ProGastro Cd, which detects toxic strains of C. difficile. The tool uses real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technology to produce a sensitive result on a stool sample in about three hours. Simple to use and with low inhibition, ProGastro Cd runs on a standard molecular instrument and fits easily into existing workflow.
In trials at three clinics, ProGastro Cd detected 43% more positives than did the current gold standard. Genetic sequencing confirmed that more than 90% of the additional positives detected by ProGastro Cd were accurate. In addition, the three clinical sites reported no inhibited samples--an important aspect because stools usually contain many PCR inhibitors.
In January 2009, BD Diagnostics received the FDA go-ahead to market GeneOhm--a molecular assay for the rapid detection of the Toxin B gene found in C. difficile. The GeneOhm assay targets the Toxin B gene, discovered in 1978, to be the cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and colitis and found in virtually all toxigenic C. difficile strains, including the emerging BI/NAP1/027 epidemic strain. It combines high sensitivity and specificity, and provides definitive test results in less than 2 hours.
"From our assay, you do not have to do a culture confirmation," Tobi Karchmer M.D., medical affairs director, BD Diagnostics (Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) said. "The hospital could start an infection control based on the assay."
Results can be obtained in 16 hours, a shorter time than the chromogenic incubation period of 18 to 24 hours and far shorter than the 48 hours required for a culture to give results.
Cepheid received FDA clearance in July 2009 for its Xpert C. difficile test, an on-demand molecular diagnostic test designed for 45-minute detection of the bacterium. Blue colonies on Cepheid's spectra plate represent a positive result for MRSA. The Xpert C. difficile test is Cepheid's seventh test to receive FDA clearance, and fourth in its expanding menu of on-demand HAI products. Cepheid will also continue to work closely with the FDA to deliver an additional product featuring simultaneous differentiation of the 027/NAP1/BI epidemic strain.
According to BD's Dr. Karchmer, before the advent of molecular testing, many physicians would ignore the results of the less sensitive tests if they did not confirm what the symptoms indicated.
"The clinicians would resend the test and order multiple tests," Karchmer says. "They didn't understand that ordering multiple tests using the same inaccurate method does not improve results. It doesn't help and is costly."
Related Links:
U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Prodesse Inc.
Becton, Dickinson and Co.
Cepheid
Health Protection Agency in the United Kingdom
University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine
Latest Immunology News
- Aptamer-Based Biosensor Enables Mutation-Resilient SARS-CoV-2 Detection
- Metabolic Biomarker Distinguishes Latent from Active Tuberculosis and Tracks Treatment Response
- Study Points to Autoimmune Pathway Behind Long COVID Symptoms
- Immune Enzyme Linked to Treatment-Resistant Inflammatory Bowel Disease
- Simple Blood Test Could Replace Biopsies for Lung Transplant Rejection Monitoring
- Routine TB Screening Test May Reveal Immune Aging and Mortality Risk
- Biomarkers and Molecular Testing Advance Precision Allergy Care
- Point-of-Care Tests Could Expand Access to Mpox Diagnosis
- T-Cell Senescence Profiling May Predict CAR T Responses
- Finger-Prick Lateral Flow Test Detects Sepsis Biomarkers at Point of Care
- Study Highlights Low Sensitivity of Current Lyme Tests in Early Infection
- Immune Aging Clock Quantifies Immunosenescence and Identifies Therapeutic Target
- Study Finds Influenza Often Undiagnosed in Winter Deaths
- Combined Screening Approach Identifies Early Leprosy Cases
- Antibody Blood Test Identifies Active TB and Distinguishes Latent Infection
- FDA Approval Expands Use of PD-L1 Companion Diagnostic in Esophageal and GEJ Carcinomas
Channels
Clinical Chemistry
view channel
Saliva-Based Test Detects Biochemical Signs of Sleep Loss
Acute sleep loss impairs cognition and motor skills, raising safety risks that resemble alcohol intoxication. Clinicians currently lack an objective biochemical test to determine when someone is dangerously... Read more
Simple Dual-Tau Blood Test Detects and Stages Alzheimer’s Disease
Alzheimer’s disease is typically confirmed and staged with positron emission tomography scans and cerebrospinal fluid testing, procedures that are costly and invasive. Broader access to minimally invasive... Read more
Alzheimer’s Blood Biomarkers Linked to Early Cognitive Differences Before Dementia
Blood-based screening for Alzheimer’s disease offers a noninvasive, lower-cost alternative to brain imaging or spinal fluid testing, yet its ability to flag the earliest cognitive changes has been unclear.... Read moreMolecular Diagnostics
view channel
New PCR Assay Supports Bundibugyo Ebola Outbreak Surveillance
Rapid identification of Ebola infections is essential to limit transmission and guide public health response, yet detection can be difficult when outbreaks involve rare variants. The current outbreaks... Read more
Plasma Protein Signature Predicts Lung Cancer Risk Up to Five Years Ahead
Lung cancer remains a leading cause of cancer death, and many cases are detected only after symptoms appear. Current screening programs largely target people with a history of smoking, leaving other at-risk... Read moreHematology
view channel
Next-Generation Hematology Platform Streamlines High-Complexity Lab Workflows
Sysmex America (Chicago, IL, USA) has introduced the next generation XR-Series, centered on the XR-10 Automated Hematology Module for high-complexity laboratories. The platform builds on the widely used... Read more
Blood Eosinophil Count May Predict Cancer Immunotherapy Response and Toxicity
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have improved outcomes across many cancers, yet only a subset of patients derive durable benefit and biomarkers to guide treatment remain limited. Eosinophils, best known for... Read moreImmunology
view channelAptamer-Based Biosensor Enables Mutation-Resilient SARS-CoV-2 Detection
Rapid evolution of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) can undermine existing molecular diagnostics, especially when assays target small viral components. Double-antibody sandwich... Read more
Study Points to Autoimmune Pathway Behind Long COVID Symptoms
Long COVID leaves many SARS-CoV-2 survivors with persistent fatigue, cognitive issues, palpitations, and musculoskeletal pain for months or years. Estimates cited in new research suggest 4%–20% of infected... Read more
Metabolic Biomarker Distinguishes Latent from Active Tuberculosis and Tracks Treatment Response
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the world’s leading infectious killer, with 10.8 million cases and 1.25 million deaths recorded globally in 2023. Yet many infected individuals never develop active disease, underscoring... Read morePathology
view channel
3D Spatial Multi-Omics Maps Intra-Tumor Diversity in Colorectal Cancer
Colorectal cancer remains a leading cause of cancer death, and clinical decision-making is complicated by marked intra-tumor heterogeneity. Conventional bulk sequencing averages molecular signals across... Read more
Blood-Based Method Tracks Gene Activity in the Living Brain
Real-time measurement of gene activity in the brain has been limited by assays requiring destructive tissue sampling. Tracking active genes could reveal how the body responds to environmental factors,... Read moreTechnology
view channel
AI Platform Links Biomarker Results to Cancer Clinical Trials and Guidelines
Oncology teams must manage growing volumes of genomic data, rapidly evolving clinical trial options, and frequently updated care guidelines, all within tight clinic schedules. Translating complex tumor... Read more
Agentic AI Platform Supports Genomic Decision-Making in Oncology
Oncology care teams increasingly face the challenge of managing complex molecular diagnostics, evolving treatment options, and extensive electronic health record documentation. Translating multimodal data... Read moreIndustry
view channel
Collaboration Advances ctDNA-Guided Development in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Natera, Inc. (Austin, TX, USA) and CytoDyn Inc. (Vancouver, WA, USA) announced a strategic collaboration focused on metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). Under the agreement, Natera will evaluate circulating... Read more








