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What is the current role of algorithmic approaches for diagnosis of Clostridium difficile infection?

TitleWhat is the current role of algorithmic approaches for diagnosis of Clostridium difficile infection?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsWilcox, MH, Planche, T, Fang, FC, Gilligan, P
JournalJ Clin Microbiol
Volume48
Issue12
Pagination4347-53
Date Published2010 Dec
ISSN1098-660X
KeywordsADP Ribose Transferases, Algorithms, Bacterial Proteins, Bacteriological Techniques, Clostridium difficile, Clostridium Infections, Humans, Immunoassay, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Sensitivity and Specificity
Abstract

With the recognition of several serious outbreaks of Clostridium difficile infection in the industrialized world coupled with the development of new testing technologies for detection of this organism, there has been renewed interest in the laboratory diagnosis of C. difficile infection. Two factors seem to have driven much of this interest. First, the recognition that immunoassays for detection of C. difficile toxins A and B, for many years the most widely used tests for C. difficile infection diagnosis, were perhaps not as sensitive as previously believed at a time when attributed deaths to C. difficile infections were showing a remarkable rise. Second, the availability of FDA-approved commercial and laboratory-developed PCR assays which could detect toxigenic strains of C. difficile provided a novel and promising testing approach for diagnosing this infection. In this point-counterpoint on the laboratory diagnosis of C. difficile infection, we have asked two experts in C. difficile infection diagnosis, Ferric Fang, who has recently published two articles in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology advocating the use of PCR as a standalone test (see this author's references 12 and 28), and Mark Wilcox, who played a key role in developing the IDSA/SHEA guidelines on Clostridium difficile infection (see Wilcox and Planche's reference 1), along with his colleague, Tim Planche, to address the following question: what is the current role of algorithmic approaches to the diagnosis of C. difficile infection?

DOI10.1128/JCM.02028-10
Alternate JournalJ. Clin. Microbiol.
PubMed ID20980568
PubMed Central IDPMC3008464