Simultaneous detection and characterization of toxigenic Clostridium difficile directly from clinical stool specimens Journal Article


Authors: Lai, H.; Huang, C.; Cai, J.; Ye, J.; She, J.; Zheng, Y.; Wang, L.; Wei, Y.; Fang, W.; Wang, X.; Tang, Y. W.; Luo, Y.; Jin, D.
Article Title: Simultaneous detection and characterization of toxigenic Clostridium difficile directly from clinical stool specimens
Abstract: We employed a multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) coupled with capillary electrophoresis (mPCR-CE) targeting six Clostridium difficile genes, including tpi, tcdA, tcdB, cdtA, cdtB, and a deletion in tcdC for simultaneous detection and characterization of toxigenic C. difficile directly from fecal specimens. The mPCR-CE had a limit of detection of 10 colony-forming units per reaction with no cross-reactions with other related bacterial genes. Clinical validation was performed on 354 consecutively collected stool specimens from patients with suspected C. difficile infection and 45 isolates. The results were compared with a reference standard combined with BD MAX Cdiff, real-time cell analysis assay (RTCA), and mPCR-CE. The toxigenic C. difficile species were detected in 36 isolates and 45 stool specimens by the mPCR-CE, which provided a positive rate of 20.3% (81/399). The mPCR-CE had a specificity of 97.2% and a sensitivity of 96.0%, which was higher than RTCA (x2 = 5.67, P = 0.017) but lower than BD MAX Cdiff (P = 0.245). Among the 45 strains, 44 (97.8%) were determined as nonribotype 027 by the mPCR-CE, which was fully agreed with PCR ribotyping. Even though ribotypes 017 (n = 8, 17.8%), 001 (n = 6, 13.3%), and 012 (n = 7, 15.6%) were predominant in this region, ribotype 027 was an important genotype monitored routinely. The mPCR-CE provided an alternative diagnosis tool for the simultaneous detection of toxigenic C. difficile in stool and potentially differentiated between RT027 and non-RT027. © 2018, Higher Education Press and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.
Keywords: human tissue; major clinical study; nonhuman; genotype; diagnosis; capillary electrophoresis; detection; clostridium difficile; feces; characterization; ribotyping; diagnostic test accuracy study; multiplex pcr; multiplex polymerase chain reaction; human; peptoclostridium difficile
Journal Title: Frontiers of Medicine
Volume: 12
Issue: 2
ISSN: 2095-0217
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2018-04-01
Start Page: 196
End Page: 205
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s11684-017-0560-5
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 29058256
PMCID: PMC6750768
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 May 2018 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Yi-Wei Tang
    188 Tang