Scimex: Being fed a non-harmful strain of the superbug Clostridium difficile can protect patients who have previously been infected with a harmful strain from becoming re-infected, according to a small-scale study by international scientists. The researchers say that the harmless bugs line the patients' guts, stopping more harmful strains from getting a foothold. Among patients with Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) who recovered
following standard treatment with the antibiotics metronidazole or
vancomycin, oral administration of spores of a strain of C difficile
that does not produce toxins colonized the gastrointestinal tract and
significantly reduced CDI recurrence, according to a study in the May 5
issue of JAMA.
C difficile is the cause of one of the most common and deadly health
care–associated infections, linked to 29,000 U.S. deaths each year.
Rates of CDI remain at unprecedented high levels in U.S. hospitals.
Clinical infection also has a recurrence rate of 25 percent to 30
percent among affected patients. Not all strains of C difficile produce
toxins. Nontoxigenic C difficile strains that lack the genes for toxin
production are also found in the hospital environment and can colonize
hospitalized patients, although patients are usually asymptomatic.
Gastrointestinal colonization by these nontoxigenic C difficile strains
(in both humans and hamsters) has shown promising results as a potential
way to prevent CDI, according to background information in the article.
Among 168 patients who started treatment, 157 completed treatment.
Clostridium difficile infection recurrence was 30 percent among patients
receiving placebo compared with 11 percent among all patients receiving
NTCD-M3. The lowest recurrence was in 5 percent of patients receiving
107 spores/d for 7 days. Fecal colonization with NTCD-M3 occurred in 69
percent of NTCD-M3 patients: 71 percent with 107 spores/d and 63 percent
with 104 spores/d. Colonization with NTCD correlated with reduced
recurrence of CDI: recurrence occurred in 2 percent patients who were
colonized vs 31 percent of patients who received NTCD-M3 but were not
colonized.
One or more treatment-emergent adverse events were reported in 78
percent of patients receiving NTCD-M3 and 86 percent of patients
receiving placebo. Diarrhea and abdominal pain were reported in 46
percent and 17 percent of patients receiving NTCD-M3 and 60 percent and
33 percent of placebo patients, respectively. Serious treatment-emergent
adverse events were reported in 7 percent of patients receiving placebo
and 3 percent of all patients who received NTCD-M3. Headache was
reported in 10 percent of patients receiving NTCD-M3 and 2 percent of
placebo patients.
The researchers write that the mechanism by which NTCD prevents
recurrent CDI is not known; however, there may be an association with
the presence of NTCD in the stool (colonization) with reduced infection
from toxigenic C difficile and in animal models with prevention of CDI
when challenged with toxigenic strains. "The most likely hypothesized
mechanism of action of NTCD-M3 is that it occupies the same metabolic or
adherence niche in the gastrointestinal tract as does toxigenic C
difficile and, once established, is able to outcompete resident or newly
ingested toxigenic strains."
The authors note that the sample size of the study was small, so many of the findings should be confirmed in larger studies.