User login
RIP Conference Provides Peer Mentoring
The research‐in‐progress (RIP) conference is commonplace in academia, but there are no studies that objectively characterize its value. Bringing faculty together away from revenue‐generating activities carries a significant cost. As such, measuring the success of such gatherings is necessary.
Mentors are an invaluable influence on the careers of junior faculty members, helping them to produce high‐quality research.13 Unfortunately, some divisions lack mentorship to support the academic needs of less experienced faculty.1 Peer mentorship may be a solution. RIP sessions represent an opportunity to intentionally formalize peer mentoring. Further, these sessions can facilitate collaborations as individuals become aware of colleagues' interests. The goal of this study was to assess the value of the research‐in‐progress conference initiated within the hospitalist division at our institution.
Methods
Study Design
This cohort study was conducted to evaluate the value of the RIP conference among hospitalists in our division and the academic outcomes of the projects.
Setting and Participants
The study took place at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center (JHBMC), a 335‐bed university‐affiliated medical center in Baltimore, Maryland. The hospitalist division consists of faculty physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants (20.06 FTE physicians and 7.41 FTE midlevel providers). Twelve (54%) of our faculty members are female, and the mean age of providers is 35.7 years. The providers have been practicing hospitalist medicine for 3.0 years on average; 2 (9%) are clinical associates, 16 (73%) are instructors, and 3 (14%) are assistant professors.
All faculty members presenting at the RIP session were members of the division. A senior faculty member (a professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine) helps to coordinate the conference. The group's research assistant was present at the sessions and was charged with data collection and collation.
The Johns Hopkins University institutional review board approved the study.
The Research in Progress Conference
During the 2009 academic year, our division held 15 RIP sessions. At each session, 1 faculty member presented a research proposal. The goal of each session was to provide a forum where faculty members could share their research ideas (specific aims, hypotheses, planned design, outcome measures, analytic plans, and preliminary results [if applicable]) in order to receive feedback. The senior faculty member met with the presenter prior to each session in order to: (1) ensure that half the RIP time was reserved for discussion and (2) review the presenter's goals so these would be made explicit to peers. The coordinator of the RIP conference facilitated the discussion, solicited input from all attendees, and encouraged constructive criticism.
Evaluation, Data Collection, and Analysis
At the end of each session, attendees (who were exclusively members of the hospitalist division) were asked to complete an anonymous survey. The 1‐page instrument was designed (1) with input from curriculum development experts4 and (2) after a review of the literature about RIP conferences. These steps conferred content validity to the instrument, which assessed perceptions about the session's quality and what was learned. Five‐point Likert scales were used to characterize the conference's success in several areas, including being intellectually/professionally stimulating and keeping them apprised of their colleagues' interests. The survey also assessed the participatory nature of the conference (balance of presentation vs discussion), its climate (extremely critical vs extremely supportive), and how the conference assisted the presenter. The presenters completed a distinct survey related to how helpful the conference was in improving/enhancing their projects. A final open‐ended section invited additional comments. The instrument was piloted and iteratively revised before its use in this study.
For the projects presented, we assessed the percentage that resulted in a peer‐reviewed publication or a presentation at a national meeting.
Results
The mean number of attendees at the RIP sessions was 9.6 persons. A total of 143 evaluations were completed. All 15 presenters (100%) completed their assessments. The research ideas presented spanned a breadth of topics in clinical research, quality improvement, policy, and professional development (Table 1).
Session | Date | Presenter | Topic | Evaluations Completed |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 7/2008 | Dr. CS | Hospital medicine in Canada versus the United States | 7 |
2 | 7/2008 | Dr. RT | Procedures by hospitalists | 9 |
3 | 8/2008 | Dr. MA | Clostridium difficile treatment in the hospital | 11 |
4 | 8/2008 | Dr. EH | Active bed management | 6 |
5 | 9/2008 | Dr. AS | Medication reconciliation for geriatric inpatients | 10 |
6 | 9/2008 | Dr. DT | Time‐motion study of hospitalists | 10 |
7 | 10/2008 | Dr. KV | e‐Triage pilot | 16 |
8 | 11/2008 | Dr. EH | Assessing clinical performance of hospitalists | 7 |
9 | 12/2008 | Dr. SC | Trends and implications of hospitalists' morale | 8 |
10 | 1/2009 | Dr. TB | Lessons learned: tracking urinary catheter use at Bayview | 11 |
11 | 2/2009 | Dr. FK | Utilizing audit and feedback to improve performance in tobacco dependence counseling | 12 |
12 | 3/2009 | Dr. MK | Survivorship care plans | 7 |
13 | 4/2009 | Dr. DK | Outpatient provider preference for discharge summary format/style/length | 7 |
14 | 5/2009 | Dr. RW | Comparing preoperative consults done by hospitalists and cardiologists | 11 |
15 | 6/2009 | Dr. AK | Development of Web‐based messaging tool for providers | 12 |
Presenter Perspective
All 15 presenters (100%) felt a lot or tremendously supported during their sessions. Thirteen physicians (86%) believed that the sessions were a lot or tremendously helpful in advancing their projects. The presenters believed that the guidance and discussions related to their research ideas, aims, hypotheses, and plans were most helpful for advancing their projects (Table 2).
Not at All, n (%) | A Little, n (%) | Some, n (%) | A Lot, n (%) | Tremendously, n (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
General questions: | |||||
Intellectually/professionally stimulating | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 5 (33) | 10 (66) |
Feeling supported by your colleagues in your scholarly pursuits | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 4 (27) | 11 (73) |
Session helpful in the following areas: | |||||
Advancing your project | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 5 (33) | 8 (53) |
Generated new hypotheses | 1 (6) | 3 (20) | 5 (33) | 5 (33) | 1 (6) |
Clarification of research questions | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 4 (27) | 7 (47) | 2 (13) |
Ideas for alternate methods | 1 (6) | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 7 (47) | 4 (27) |
New outcomes suggested | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 2 (13) | 5 (33) | 5 (33) |
Strategies to improve or enhance data collection | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 0 (0) | 8 (53) | 5 (33) |
Suggestions for alternate analyses or analytical strategies | 1 (1) | 1 (6) | 4 (27) | 5 (33) | 4 (27) |
Input into what is most novel/emnteresting about this work | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 3 (20) | 6 (40) | 4 (27) |
Guidance about the implications of the work | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 1 (6) | 7 (47) | 4 (27) |
Ideas about next steps or future direction/studies | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 3 (21) | 8 (57) | 3 (21) |
Examples of the written comments are:
I was overwhelmed by how engaged people were in my project.
The process of preparing for the session and then the discussion both helped my thinking. Colleagues were very supportive.
I am so glad I heard these comments and received this feedback now, rather than from peer reviewers selected by a journal to review my study. It would have been a much more difficult situation to fix at that later time.
Attendee Perspective
The majority of attendees (123 of 143, 86%) found the sessions to be a lot or extremely stimulating, and almost all (96%) were a lot or extremely satisfied with how the RIP sessions kept them abreast of their colleagues' academic interests. In addition, 92% judged the session's climate to be a lot or extremely supportive, and 88% deemed the balance of presentation to discussion to be just right. Attendees believed that they were most helpful to the presenter in terms of conceiving ideas for alternative methods to be used to answer the research question and in providing strategies to improve data collection (Table 3).
Insight Offered | n (%) |
---|---|
Ideas for alternate methods | 92 (64%) |
Strategies to improve data collection | 85 (59.4%) |
New hypotheses generated | 84 (58.7%) |
Ideas for next steps/future direction/studies | 83 (58%) |
New outcomes suggested that should be considered | 69 (48%) |
Clarification of the research questions | 61 (43%) |
Input about what is most novel/emnteresting about the work | 60 (42%) |
Guidance about the real implications of the work | 59 (41%) |
Suggestions for alternate analyses or analytical strategies | 51 (36%) |
The free text comments primarily addressed how the presenters' research ideas were helped by the session:
There were great ideas for improvementincluding practical approaches for recruitment.
The session made me think of the daily routine things that we do that could be studied.
There were some great ideas to help Dr. A make the study more simple, doable, and practical. There were also some good ideas regarding potential sources of funding.
Academic Success
Of the 15 projects, 6 have been published in peer‐reviewed journals as first‐ or senior‐authored publications.510 Of these, 3 were presented at national meetings prior to publication. Four additional projects have been presented at a national society's annual meeting, all of which are being prepared for publication. Of the remaining 5 presentations, 4 were terminated because of the low likelihood of academic success. The remaining project is ongoing.
Comparatively, scholarly output in the prior year by the 24 physicians in the hospitalist group was 4 first‐ or senior‐authored publications in peer‐reviewed journals and 3 presentations at national meetings.
Discussion
In this article, we report our experience with the RIP conference. The sessions were perceived to be intellectually stimulating and supportive, whereas the discussions proved helpful in advancing project ideas. Ample discussion time and good attendance were thought to be critical to the success.
To our knowledge, this is the first article gathering feedback from attendees and presenters at a RIP conference and to track academic outcomes. Several types of meetings have been established within faculty and trainee groups to support and encourage scholarly activities.11, 12 The benefits of peer collaboration and peer mentoring have been described in the literature.13, 14 For example, Edwards described the success of shortstop meetings among small groups of faculty members every 4‐6 weeks in which discussions of research projects and mutual feedback would occur.15 Santucci described peer‐mentored research development meetings, with increased research productivity.12
Mentoring is critically important for academic success in medicine.1619 When divisions have limited senior mentors available, peer mentoring has proven to be indispensable as a mechanism to support faculty members.2022 The RIP conference provided a forum for peer mentoring and provided a partial solution to the limited resource of experienced research mentors in the division. The RIP sessions appear to have helped to bring the majority of presented ideas to academic fruition. Perhaps even more important, the sessions were able to terminate studies judged to have low academic promise before the faculty had invested significant time.
Several limitations of our study should be considered. First, this study involved a research‐in‐progress conference coordinated for a group of hospitalist physicians at 1 institution, and the results may not be generalizable. Second, although attendance was good at each conference, some faculty members did not come to many sessions. It is possible that those not attending may have rated the sessions differently. Session evaluations were anonymous, and we do not know whether specific attendees rated all sessions highly, thereby resulting in some degree of clustering. Third, this study did not compare the effectiveness of the RIP conference with other peer‐mentorship models. Finally, our study was uncontrolled. Although it would not be possible to restrict specific faculty from presenting at or attending the RIP conference, we intend to more carefully collect attendance data to see whether there might be a dose‐response effect with respect to participation in this conference and academic success.
In conclusion, our RIP conference was perceived as valuable by our group and was associated with academic success. In our division, the RIP conference serves as a way to operationalize peer mentoring. Our findings may help other groups to refine either the focus or format of their RIP sessions and those wishing to initiate such a conference.
- Junior faculty members' mentoring relationships and their professional development in US medical schools.Acad Med.1998;73:318–323. , , , et al.
- Mentors, Advisors and Role Models in Graduate and Professional Education.Washington, DC:Association of Academic Health Centers;1996. , .
- Characteristics of the successful researcher and implications for faculty development.J Med Educ.1986;61:22–31. , .
- Curriculum Development for Medical Education: A Six‐Step Approach.2nd ed.Baltimore, MD:The Johns Hopkins University Press;2009. , , .
- Characteristics of hospitalists and hospitalist programs in the United States and Canada.J Clin Outcomes Meas.2009;16:69–74 , , , et al.
- Procedures performed by hospitalist and non‐hospitalist general internists.J Gen Intern Med.2010;25:448–452. , , , et al.
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe Clostridium difficile colitis: an observational study and review of the literature [review].J Hosp Med.2010;5:E1–E9. , , , et al.
- Active bed management by hospitalists and emergency department throughput.Ann Intern Med.2008;149:804–811. , , , et al.
- Transitioning to breast cancer survivorship: perspectives of patients, cancer specialists, and primary care providers.J Gen Intern Med.2009;24(Suppl 2):S459–S466. , , , et al.
- Utilizing audit and feedback to improve hospitalists' performance in tobacco dependence counseling.Nicotine Tob Res.2010;12:797–800. , , , et al.
- An internal medicine interest group research program can improve scholarly productivity of medical students and foster mentoring relationships with internists.Teach Learn Med.2008;20:163–167. , , , et al.
- Peer‐mentored research development meeting: a model for successful peer mentoring among junior level researchers.Acad Psychiatry.2008;32:493–497. , , , et al.
- Mentoring junior faculty in geriatric oncology: report from the cancer and aging research group.J Clin Oncol.2008;26:3125–3127. , , , et al.
- the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group.Investigator‐led clinical research consortia: the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group.Crit Care Med.2009;37(1):S165–S172. , ,
- “Short stops”: peer support of scholarly activity.Acad Med.2002;77:939. .
- Mentorship in academic general internal medicine. Results of a survey of mentors.J Gen Intern Med.2005;20:1014–1018. , , , , , , .
- Making the most of mentors: a guide for mentees.Acad Med.2009;84:140–144. , , , et al.
- Mentoring in academic medicine: a systematic review.JAMA.2006;296:1103–1115. , , .
- Assessing the role of influential mentors in the research development of primary care fellows.Acad Med.2004;79:865–872. , , , et al.
- Peer group mentoring of junior faculty.Acad Psychiatry.2008;32:230–235. , , .
- Facilitated peer mentorship: a pilot program for academic advancement of female medical faculty.J Womens Health.2008;17:1009–1015. , , , .
- Mentoring faculty in academic medicine. A new paradigm?J Gen Intern Med.2005;20:866–870. ,
The research‐in‐progress (RIP) conference is commonplace in academia, but there are no studies that objectively characterize its value. Bringing faculty together away from revenue‐generating activities carries a significant cost. As such, measuring the success of such gatherings is necessary.
Mentors are an invaluable influence on the careers of junior faculty members, helping them to produce high‐quality research.13 Unfortunately, some divisions lack mentorship to support the academic needs of less experienced faculty.1 Peer mentorship may be a solution. RIP sessions represent an opportunity to intentionally formalize peer mentoring. Further, these sessions can facilitate collaborations as individuals become aware of colleagues' interests. The goal of this study was to assess the value of the research‐in‐progress conference initiated within the hospitalist division at our institution.
Methods
Study Design
This cohort study was conducted to evaluate the value of the RIP conference among hospitalists in our division and the academic outcomes of the projects.
Setting and Participants
The study took place at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center (JHBMC), a 335‐bed university‐affiliated medical center in Baltimore, Maryland. The hospitalist division consists of faculty physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants (20.06 FTE physicians and 7.41 FTE midlevel providers). Twelve (54%) of our faculty members are female, and the mean age of providers is 35.7 years. The providers have been practicing hospitalist medicine for 3.0 years on average; 2 (9%) are clinical associates, 16 (73%) are instructors, and 3 (14%) are assistant professors.
All faculty members presenting at the RIP session were members of the division. A senior faculty member (a professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine) helps to coordinate the conference. The group's research assistant was present at the sessions and was charged with data collection and collation.
The Johns Hopkins University institutional review board approved the study.
The Research in Progress Conference
During the 2009 academic year, our division held 15 RIP sessions. At each session, 1 faculty member presented a research proposal. The goal of each session was to provide a forum where faculty members could share their research ideas (specific aims, hypotheses, planned design, outcome measures, analytic plans, and preliminary results [if applicable]) in order to receive feedback. The senior faculty member met with the presenter prior to each session in order to: (1) ensure that half the RIP time was reserved for discussion and (2) review the presenter's goals so these would be made explicit to peers. The coordinator of the RIP conference facilitated the discussion, solicited input from all attendees, and encouraged constructive criticism.
Evaluation, Data Collection, and Analysis
At the end of each session, attendees (who were exclusively members of the hospitalist division) were asked to complete an anonymous survey. The 1‐page instrument was designed (1) with input from curriculum development experts4 and (2) after a review of the literature about RIP conferences. These steps conferred content validity to the instrument, which assessed perceptions about the session's quality and what was learned. Five‐point Likert scales were used to characterize the conference's success in several areas, including being intellectually/professionally stimulating and keeping them apprised of their colleagues' interests. The survey also assessed the participatory nature of the conference (balance of presentation vs discussion), its climate (extremely critical vs extremely supportive), and how the conference assisted the presenter. The presenters completed a distinct survey related to how helpful the conference was in improving/enhancing their projects. A final open‐ended section invited additional comments. The instrument was piloted and iteratively revised before its use in this study.
For the projects presented, we assessed the percentage that resulted in a peer‐reviewed publication or a presentation at a national meeting.
Results
The mean number of attendees at the RIP sessions was 9.6 persons. A total of 143 evaluations were completed. All 15 presenters (100%) completed their assessments. The research ideas presented spanned a breadth of topics in clinical research, quality improvement, policy, and professional development (Table 1).
Session | Date | Presenter | Topic | Evaluations Completed |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 7/2008 | Dr. CS | Hospital medicine in Canada versus the United States | 7 |
2 | 7/2008 | Dr. RT | Procedures by hospitalists | 9 |
3 | 8/2008 | Dr. MA | Clostridium difficile treatment in the hospital | 11 |
4 | 8/2008 | Dr. EH | Active bed management | 6 |
5 | 9/2008 | Dr. AS | Medication reconciliation for geriatric inpatients | 10 |
6 | 9/2008 | Dr. DT | Time‐motion study of hospitalists | 10 |
7 | 10/2008 | Dr. KV | e‐Triage pilot | 16 |
8 | 11/2008 | Dr. EH | Assessing clinical performance of hospitalists | 7 |
9 | 12/2008 | Dr. SC | Trends and implications of hospitalists' morale | 8 |
10 | 1/2009 | Dr. TB | Lessons learned: tracking urinary catheter use at Bayview | 11 |
11 | 2/2009 | Dr. FK | Utilizing audit and feedback to improve performance in tobacco dependence counseling | 12 |
12 | 3/2009 | Dr. MK | Survivorship care plans | 7 |
13 | 4/2009 | Dr. DK | Outpatient provider preference for discharge summary format/style/length | 7 |
14 | 5/2009 | Dr. RW | Comparing preoperative consults done by hospitalists and cardiologists | 11 |
15 | 6/2009 | Dr. AK | Development of Web‐based messaging tool for providers | 12 |
Presenter Perspective
All 15 presenters (100%) felt a lot or tremendously supported during their sessions. Thirteen physicians (86%) believed that the sessions were a lot or tremendously helpful in advancing their projects. The presenters believed that the guidance and discussions related to their research ideas, aims, hypotheses, and plans were most helpful for advancing their projects (Table 2).
Not at All, n (%) | A Little, n (%) | Some, n (%) | A Lot, n (%) | Tremendously, n (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
General questions: | |||||
Intellectually/professionally stimulating | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 5 (33) | 10 (66) |
Feeling supported by your colleagues in your scholarly pursuits | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 4 (27) | 11 (73) |
Session helpful in the following areas: | |||||
Advancing your project | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 5 (33) | 8 (53) |
Generated new hypotheses | 1 (6) | 3 (20) | 5 (33) | 5 (33) | 1 (6) |
Clarification of research questions | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 4 (27) | 7 (47) | 2 (13) |
Ideas for alternate methods | 1 (6) | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 7 (47) | 4 (27) |
New outcomes suggested | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 2 (13) | 5 (33) | 5 (33) |
Strategies to improve or enhance data collection | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 0 (0) | 8 (53) | 5 (33) |
Suggestions for alternate analyses or analytical strategies | 1 (1) | 1 (6) | 4 (27) | 5 (33) | 4 (27) |
Input into what is most novel/emnteresting about this work | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 3 (20) | 6 (40) | 4 (27) |
Guidance about the implications of the work | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 1 (6) | 7 (47) | 4 (27) |
Ideas about next steps or future direction/studies | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 3 (21) | 8 (57) | 3 (21) |
Examples of the written comments are:
I was overwhelmed by how engaged people were in my project.
The process of preparing for the session and then the discussion both helped my thinking. Colleagues were very supportive.
I am so glad I heard these comments and received this feedback now, rather than from peer reviewers selected by a journal to review my study. It would have been a much more difficult situation to fix at that later time.
Attendee Perspective
The majority of attendees (123 of 143, 86%) found the sessions to be a lot or extremely stimulating, and almost all (96%) were a lot or extremely satisfied with how the RIP sessions kept them abreast of their colleagues' academic interests. In addition, 92% judged the session's climate to be a lot or extremely supportive, and 88% deemed the balance of presentation to discussion to be just right. Attendees believed that they were most helpful to the presenter in terms of conceiving ideas for alternative methods to be used to answer the research question and in providing strategies to improve data collection (Table 3).
Insight Offered | n (%) |
---|---|
Ideas for alternate methods | 92 (64%) |
Strategies to improve data collection | 85 (59.4%) |
New hypotheses generated | 84 (58.7%) |
Ideas for next steps/future direction/studies | 83 (58%) |
New outcomes suggested that should be considered | 69 (48%) |
Clarification of the research questions | 61 (43%) |
Input about what is most novel/emnteresting about the work | 60 (42%) |
Guidance about the real implications of the work | 59 (41%) |
Suggestions for alternate analyses or analytical strategies | 51 (36%) |
The free text comments primarily addressed how the presenters' research ideas were helped by the session:
There were great ideas for improvementincluding practical approaches for recruitment.
The session made me think of the daily routine things that we do that could be studied.
There were some great ideas to help Dr. A make the study more simple, doable, and practical. There were also some good ideas regarding potential sources of funding.
Academic Success
Of the 15 projects, 6 have been published in peer‐reviewed journals as first‐ or senior‐authored publications.510 Of these, 3 were presented at national meetings prior to publication. Four additional projects have been presented at a national society's annual meeting, all of which are being prepared for publication. Of the remaining 5 presentations, 4 were terminated because of the low likelihood of academic success. The remaining project is ongoing.
Comparatively, scholarly output in the prior year by the 24 physicians in the hospitalist group was 4 first‐ or senior‐authored publications in peer‐reviewed journals and 3 presentations at national meetings.
Discussion
In this article, we report our experience with the RIP conference. The sessions were perceived to be intellectually stimulating and supportive, whereas the discussions proved helpful in advancing project ideas. Ample discussion time and good attendance were thought to be critical to the success.
To our knowledge, this is the first article gathering feedback from attendees and presenters at a RIP conference and to track academic outcomes. Several types of meetings have been established within faculty and trainee groups to support and encourage scholarly activities.11, 12 The benefits of peer collaboration and peer mentoring have been described in the literature.13, 14 For example, Edwards described the success of shortstop meetings among small groups of faculty members every 4‐6 weeks in which discussions of research projects and mutual feedback would occur.15 Santucci described peer‐mentored research development meetings, with increased research productivity.12
Mentoring is critically important for academic success in medicine.1619 When divisions have limited senior mentors available, peer mentoring has proven to be indispensable as a mechanism to support faculty members.2022 The RIP conference provided a forum for peer mentoring and provided a partial solution to the limited resource of experienced research mentors in the division. The RIP sessions appear to have helped to bring the majority of presented ideas to academic fruition. Perhaps even more important, the sessions were able to terminate studies judged to have low academic promise before the faculty had invested significant time.
Several limitations of our study should be considered. First, this study involved a research‐in‐progress conference coordinated for a group of hospitalist physicians at 1 institution, and the results may not be generalizable. Second, although attendance was good at each conference, some faculty members did not come to many sessions. It is possible that those not attending may have rated the sessions differently. Session evaluations were anonymous, and we do not know whether specific attendees rated all sessions highly, thereby resulting in some degree of clustering. Third, this study did not compare the effectiveness of the RIP conference with other peer‐mentorship models. Finally, our study was uncontrolled. Although it would not be possible to restrict specific faculty from presenting at or attending the RIP conference, we intend to more carefully collect attendance data to see whether there might be a dose‐response effect with respect to participation in this conference and academic success.
In conclusion, our RIP conference was perceived as valuable by our group and was associated with academic success. In our division, the RIP conference serves as a way to operationalize peer mentoring. Our findings may help other groups to refine either the focus or format of their RIP sessions and those wishing to initiate such a conference.
The research‐in‐progress (RIP) conference is commonplace in academia, but there are no studies that objectively characterize its value. Bringing faculty together away from revenue‐generating activities carries a significant cost. As such, measuring the success of such gatherings is necessary.
Mentors are an invaluable influence on the careers of junior faculty members, helping them to produce high‐quality research.13 Unfortunately, some divisions lack mentorship to support the academic needs of less experienced faculty.1 Peer mentorship may be a solution. RIP sessions represent an opportunity to intentionally formalize peer mentoring. Further, these sessions can facilitate collaborations as individuals become aware of colleagues' interests. The goal of this study was to assess the value of the research‐in‐progress conference initiated within the hospitalist division at our institution.
Methods
Study Design
This cohort study was conducted to evaluate the value of the RIP conference among hospitalists in our division and the academic outcomes of the projects.
Setting and Participants
The study took place at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center (JHBMC), a 335‐bed university‐affiliated medical center in Baltimore, Maryland. The hospitalist division consists of faculty physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants (20.06 FTE physicians and 7.41 FTE midlevel providers). Twelve (54%) of our faculty members are female, and the mean age of providers is 35.7 years. The providers have been practicing hospitalist medicine for 3.0 years on average; 2 (9%) are clinical associates, 16 (73%) are instructors, and 3 (14%) are assistant professors.
All faculty members presenting at the RIP session were members of the division. A senior faculty member (a professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine) helps to coordinate the conference. The group's research assistant was present at the sessions and was charged with data collection and collation.
The Johns Hopkins University institutional review board approved the study.
The Research in Progress Conference
During the 2009 academic year, our division held 15 RIP sessions. At each session, 1 faculty member presented a research proposal. The goal of each session was to provide a forum where faculty members could share their research ideas (specific aims, hypotheses, planned design, outcome measures, analytic plans, and preliminary results [if applicable]) in order to receive feedback. The senior faculty member met with the presenter prior to each session in order to: (1) ensure that half the RIP time was reserved for discussion and (2) review the presenter's goals so these would be made explicit to peers. The coordinator of the RIP conference facilitated the discussion, solicited input from all attendees, and encouraged constructive criticism.
Evaluation, Data Collection, and Analysis
At the end of each session, attendees (who were exclusively members of the hospitalist division) were asked to complete an anonymous survey. The 1‐page instrument was designed (1) with input from curriculum development experts4 and (2) after a review of the literature about RIP conferences. These steps conferred content validity to the instrument, which assessed perceptions about the session's quality and what was learned. Five‐point Likert scales were used to characterize the conference's success in several areas, including being intellectually/professionally stimulating and keeping them apprised of their colleagues' interests. The survey also assessed the participatory nature of the conference (balance of presentation vs discussion), its climate (extremely critical vs extremely supportive), and how the conference assisted the presenter. The presenters completed a distinct survey related to how helpful the conference was in improving/enhancing their projects. A final open‐ended section invited additional comments. The instrument was piloted and iteratively revised before its use in this study.
For the projects presented, we assessed the percentage that resulted in a peer‐reviewed publication or a presentation at a national meeting.
Results
The mean number of attendees at the RIP sessions was 9.6 persons. A total of 143 evaluations were completed. All 15 presenters (100%) completed their assessments. The research ideas presented spanned a breadth of topics in clinical research, quality improvement, policy, and professional development (Table 1).
Session | Date | Presenter | Topic | Evaluations Completed |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 7/2008 | Dr. CS | Hospital medicine in Canada versus the United States | 7 |
2 | 7/2008 | Dr. RT | Procedures by hospitalists | 9 |
3 | 8/2008 | Dr. MA | Clostridium difficile treatment in the hospital | 11 |
4 | 8/2008 | Dr. EH | Active bed management | 6 |
5 | 9/2008 | Dr. AS | Medication reconciliation for geriatric inpatients | 10 |
6 | 9/2008 | Dr. DT | Time‐motion study of hospitalists | 10 |
7 | 10/2008 | Dr. KV | e‐Triage pilot | 16 |
8 | 11/2008 | Dr. EH | Assessing clinical performance of hospitalists | 7 |
9 | 12/2008 | Dr. SC | Trends and implications of hospitalists' morale | 8 |
10 | 1/2009 | Dr. TB | Lessons learned: tracking urinary catheter use at Bayview | 11 |
11 | 2/2009 | Dr. FK | Utilizing audit and feedback to improve performance in tobacco dependence counseling | 12 |
12 | 3/2009 | Dr. MK | Survivorship care plans | 7 |
13 | 4/2009 | Dr. DK | Outpatient provider preference for discharge summary format/style/length | 7 |
14 | 5/2009 | Dr. RW | Comparing preoperative consults done by hospitalists and cardiologists | 11 |
15 | 6/2009 | Dr. AK | Development of Web‐based messaging tool for providers | 12 |
Presenter Perspective
All 15 presenters (100%) felt a lot or tremendously supported during their sessions. Thirteen physicians (86%) believed that the sessions were a lot or tremendously helpful in advancing their projects. The presenters believed that the guidance and discussions related to their research ideas, aims, hypotheses, and plans were most helpful for advancing their projects (Table 2).
Not at All, n (%) | A Little, n (%) | Some, n (%) | A Lot, n (%) | Tremendously, n (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
General questions: | |||||
Intellectually/professionally stimulating | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 5 (33) | 10 (66) |
Feeling supported by your colleagues in your scholarly pursuits | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 4 (27) | 11 (73) |
Session helpful in the following areas: | |||||
Advancing your project | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 5 (33) | 8 (53) |
Generated new hypotheses | 1 (6) | 3 (20) | 5 (33) | 5 (33) | 1 (6) |
Clarification of research questions | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 4 (27) | 7 (47) | 2 (13) |
Ideas for alternate methods | 1 (6) | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 7 (47) | 4 (27) |
New outcomes suggested | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 2 (13) | 5 (33) | 5 (33) |
Strategies to improve or enhance data collection | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 0 (0) | 8 (53) | 5 (33) |
Suggestions for alternate analyses or analytical strategies | 1 (1) | 1 (6) | 4 (27) | 5 (33) | 4 (27) |
Input into what is most novel/emnteresting about this work | 0 (0) | 2 (13) | 3 (20) | 6 (40) | 4 (27) |
Guidance about the implications of the work | 1 (6) | 2 (13) | 1 (6) | 7 (47) | 4 (27) |
Ideas about next steps or future direction/studies | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 3 (21) | 8 (57) | 3 (21) |
Examples of the written comments are:
I was overwhelmed by how engaged people were in my project.
The process of preparing for the session and then the discussion both helped my thinking. Colleagues were very supportive.
I am so glad I heard these comments and received this feedback now, rather than from peer reviewers selected by a journal to review my study. It would have been a much more difficult situation to fix at that later time.
Attendee Perspective
The majority of attendees (123 of 143, 86%) found the sessions to be a lot or extremely stimulating, and almost all (96%) were a lot or extremely satisfied with how the RIP sessions kept them abreast of their colleagues' academic interests. In addition, 92% judged the session's climate to be a lot or extremely supportive, and 88% deemed the balance of presentation to discussion to be just right. Attendees believed that they were most helpful to the presenter in terms of conceiving ideas for alternative methods to be used to answer the research question and in providing strategies to improve data collection (Table 3).
Insight Offered | n (%) |
---|---|
Ideas for alternate methods | 92 (64%) |
Strategies to improve data collection | 85 (59.4%) |
New hypotheses generated | 84 (58.7%) |
Ideas for next steps/future direction/studies | 83 (58%) |
New outcomes suggested that should be considered | 69 (48%) |
Clarification of the research questions | 61 (43%) |
Input about what is most novel/emnteresting about the work | 60 (42%) |
Guidance about the real implications of the work | 59 (41%) |
Suggestions for alternate analyses or analytical strategies | 51 (36%) |
The free text comments primarily addressed how the presenters' research ideas were helped by the session:
There were great ideas for improvementincluding practical approaches for recruitment.
The session made me think of the daily routine things that we do that could be studied.
There were some great ideas to help Dr. A make the study more simple, doable, and practical. There were also some good ideas regarding potential sources of funding.
Academic Success
Of the 15 projects, 6 have been published in peer‐reviewed journals as first‐ or senior‐authored publications.510 Of these, 3 were presented at national meetings prior to publication. Four additional projects have been presented at a national society's annual meeting, all of which are being prepared for publication. Of the remaining 5 presentations, 4 were terminated because of the low likelihood of academic success. The remaining project is ongoing.
Comparatively, scholarly output in the prior year by the 24 physicians in the hospitalist group was 4 first‐ or senior‐authored publications in peer‐reviewed journals and 3 presentations at national meetings.
Discussion
In this article, we report our experience with the RIP conference. The sessions were perceived to be intellectually stimulating and supportive, whereas the discussions proved helpful in advancing project ideas. Ample discussion time and good attendance were thought to be critical to the success.
To our knowledge, this is the first article gathering feedback from attendees and presenters at a RIP conference and to track academic outcomes. Several types of meetings have been established within faculty and trainee groups to support and encourage scholarly activities.11, 12 The benefits of peer collaboration and peer mentoring have been described in the literature.13, 14 For example, Edwards described the success of shortstop meetings among small groups of faculty members every 4‐6 weeks in which discussions of research projects and mutual feedback would occur.15 Santucci described peer‐mentored research development meetings, with increased research productivity.12
Mentoring is critically important for academic success in medicine.1619 When divisions have limited senior mentors available, peer mentoring has proven to be indispensable as a mechanism to support faculty members.2022 The RIP conference provided a forum for peer mentoring and provided a partial solution to the limited resource of experienced research mentors in the division. The RIP sessions appear to have helped to bring the majority of presented ideas to academic fruition. Perhaps even more important, the sessions were able to terminate studies judged to have low academic promise before the faculty had invested significant time.
Several limitations of our study should be considered. First, this study involved a research‐in‐progress conference coordinated for a group of hospitalist physicians at 1 institution, and the results may not be generalizable. Second, although attendance was good at each conference, some faculty members did not come to many sessions. It is possible that those not attending may have rated the sessions differently. Session evaluations were anonymous, and we do not know whether specific attendees rated all sessions highly, thereby resulting in some degree of clustering. Third, this study did not compare the effectiveness of the RIP conference with other peer‐mentorship models. Finally, our study was uncontrolled. Although it would not be possible to restrict specific faculty from presenting at or attending the RIP conference, we intend to more carefully collect attendance data to see whether there might be a dose‐response effect with respect to participation in this conference and academic success.
In conclusion, our RIP conference was perceived as valuable by our group and was associated with academic success. In our division, the RIP conference serves as a way to operationalize peer mentoring. Our findings may help other groups to refine either the focus or format of their RIP sessions and those wishing to initiate such a conference.
- Junior faculty members' mentoring relationships and their professional development in US medical schools.Acad Med.1998;73:318–323. , , , et al.
- Mentors, Advisors and Role Models in Graduate and Professional Education.Washington, DC:Association of Academic Health Centers;1996. , .
- Characteristics of the successful researcher and implications for faculty development.J Med Educ.1986;61:22–31. , .
- Curriculum Development for Medical Education: A Six‐Step Approach.2nd ed.Baltimore, MD:The Johns Hopkins University Press;2009. , , .
- Characteristics of hospitalists and hospitalist programs in the United States and Canada.J Clin Outcomes Meas.2009;16:69–74 , , , et al.
- Procedures performed by hospitalist and non‐hospitalist general internists.J Gen Intern Med.2010;25:448–452. , , , et al.
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe Clostridium difficile colitis: an observational study and review of the literature [review].J Hosp Med.2010;5:E1–E9. , , , et al.
- Active bed management by hospitalists and emergency department throughput.Ann Intern Med.2008;149:804–811. , , , et al.
- Transitioning to breast cancer survivorship: perspectives of patients, cancer specialists, and primary care providers.J Gen Intern Med.2009;24(Suppl 2):S459–S466. , , , et al.
- Utilizing audit and feedback to improve hospitalists' performance in tobacco dependence counseling.Nicotine Tob Res.2010;12:797–800. , , , et al.
- An internal medicine interest group research program can improve scholarly productivity of medical students and foster mentoring relationships with internists.Teach Learn Med.2008;20:163–167. , , , et al.
- Peer‐mentored research development meeting: a model for successful peer mentoring among junior level researchers.Acad Psychiatry.2008;32:493–497. , , , et al.
- Mentoring junior faculty in geriatric oncology: report from the cancer and aging research group.J Clin Oncol.2008;26:3125–3127. , , , et al.
- the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group.Investigator‐led clinical research consortia: the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group.Crit Care Med.2009;37(1):S165–S172. , ,
- “Short stops”: peer support of scholarly activity.Acad Med.2002;77:939. .
- Mentorship in academic general internal medicine. Results of a survey of mentors.J Gen Intern Med.2005;20:1014–1018. , , , , , , .
- Making the most of mentors: a guide for mentees.Acad Med.2009;84:140–144. , , , et al.
- Mentoring in academic medicine: a systematic review.JAMA.2006;296:1103–1115. , , .
- Assessing the role of influential mentors in the research development of primary care fellows.Acad Med.2004;79:865–872. , , , et al.
- Peer group mentoring of junior faculty.Acad Psychiatry.2008;32:230–235. , , .
- Facilitated peer mentorship: a pilot program for academic advancement of female medical faculty.J Womens Health.2008;17:1009–1015. , , , .
- Mentoring faculty in academic medicine. A new paradigm?J Gen Intern Med.2005;20:866–870. ,
- Junior faculty members' mentoring relationships and their professional development in US medical schools.Acad Med.1998;73:318–323. , , , et al.
- Mentors, Advisors and Role Models in Graduate and Professional Education.Washington, DC:Association of Academic Health Centers;1996. , .
- Characteristics of the successful researcher and implications for faculty development.J Med Educ.1986;61:22–31. , .
- Curriculum Development for Medical Education: A Six‐Step Approach.2nd ed.Baltimore, MD:The Johns Hopkins University Press;2009. , , .
- Characteristics of hospitalists and hospitalist programs in the United States and Canada.J Clin Outcomes Meas.2009;16:69–74 , , , et al.
- Procedures performed by hospitalist and non‐hospitalist general internists.J Gen Intern Med.2010;25:448–452. , , , et al.
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe Clostridium difficile colitis: an observational study and review of the literature [review].J Hosp Med.2010;5:E1–E9. , , , et al.
- Active bed management by hospitalists and emergency department throughput.Ann Intern Med.2008;149:804–811. , , , et al.
- Transitioning to breast cancer survivorship: perspectives of patients, cancer specialists, and primary care providers.J Gen Intern Med.2009;24(Suppl 2):S459–S466. , , , et al.
- Utilizing audit and feedback to improve hospitalists' performance in tobacco dependence counseling.Nicotine Tob Res.2010;12:797–800. , , , et al.
- An internal medicine interest group research program can improve scholarly productivity of medical students and foster mentoring relationships with internists.Teach Learn Med.2008;20:163–167. , , , et al.
- Peer‐mentored research development meeting: a model for successful peer mentoring among junior level researchers.Acad Psychiatry.2008;32:493–497. , , , et al.
- Mentoring junior faculty in geriatric oncology: report from the cancer and aging research group.J Clin Oncol.2008;26:3125–3127. , , , et al.
- the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group.Investigator‐led clinical research consortia: the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group.Crit Care Med.2009;37(1):S165–S172. , ,
- “Short stops”: peer support of scholarly activity.Acad Med.2002;77:939. .
- Mentorship in academic general internal medicine. Results of a survey of mentors.J Gen Intern Med.2005;20:1014–1018. , , , , , , .
- Making the most of mentors: a guide for mentees.Acad Med.2009;84:140–144. , , , et al.
- Mentoring in academic medicine: a systematic review.JAMA.2006;296:1103–1115. , , .
- Assessing the role of influential mentors in the research development of primary care fellows.Acad Med.2004;79:865–872. , , , et al.
- Peer group mentoring of junior faculty.Acad Psychiatry.2008;32:230–235. , , .
- Facilitated peer mentorship: a pilot program for academic advancement of female medical faculty.J Womens Health.2008;17:1009–1015. , , , .
- Mentoring faculty in academic medicine. A new paradigm?J Gen Intern Med.2005;20:866–870. ,
Copyright © 2011 Society of Hospital Medicine
IVIG for Severe Colitis
Clostridium difficile colitis (CDC) is the most common cause of hospital‐acquired diarrhea.1 The incidence of CDC has sharply increased over the past decade despite increasing awareness among health care professionals.24 C. difficile pathogenic strains induce diarrhea through the elaboration and secretion of 2 exotoxins: toxin A and toxin B. Toxin A is an inflammatory toxin, leading to fluid secretion, increased mucosal permeability, and marked enteritis and colitis.5 Toxin B is cytotoxic, leading to cell injury and apoptosis.5 Combined, toxin A and toxin B can cause a wide spectrum of clinical presentations, ranging from mild diarrhea that resolves with the discontinuation of antibiotics to a fulminant colitis requiring surgical intervention.
The severity of clinical manifestations has been shown to be inversely proportional to the host anti‐toxin A antibody level in response to toxin exposure. Kyne et al.6 demonstrated that asymptomatic C. difficile carriers produced significantly higher anti‐toxin A immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels compared to symptomatic patients. Among the latter group, patients with mild disease had a higher antibody level compared to those with severe colitis.6, 7 Additional risk factors predisposing to severe colitis are advanced age, severe underlying illness,8 and immunocompromised state.9
Recently, a new C. difficile strain (BI/NAP1) with a mutated toxin A and toxin B promoter silencer, a binary toxin gene, and fluoroquinolone resistance has been described in Canada and the United States.3, 10 This strain has been associated with an increased incidence of CDC among hospitalized patients, especially the incidence of severe disease requiring colectomy. At the same time, several reports describing metronidazole treatment failure have been published.1114 These recent findings emphasize the importance of finding alternative treatments for CDC.
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) was used to treat CDC for the first time in 1991.15 Since then, 12 case reports and small case series, along with 1 case‐control study have been published documenting IVIG treatment outcomes.1527 However, only 5 reports to date examined patients with severe CDC.2125 In the present study, we report the largest series of patients with severe CDC treated with IVIG in the literature to our knowledge.
Patients and Methods
Case Series
We used CareScience software (CareScience, Inc., Philadelphia, PA) to retrospectively identify all patients admitted to our institution with a primary or secondary diagnosis of CDC (code 00845) between July 1, 2002 and May 1, 2006. CareScience is commercially available software that tracks all admissions to our institution and allows the performance of patient searches with a wide spectrum of user‐defined search criteria. Using the same software, we further identified those patients who received IVIG during their hospital stay. We then obtained the hospital chart for each patient, from the medical records department and established the study database.
A case was defined as a patient with diarrhea (at least 3 loose stools daily) for at least 2 days who had C. difficile cytotoxin‐positive feces and at least 1 of the following criteria: clinical symptoms (abdominal pain and/or distension and fever); leukemoid reaction (defined as white blood cell count of 20,000 cells/mm3 or above. This cutoff value was chosen as it has been used previously as a prognostic factor)4; radiographic evidence of colitis by computed tomography (CT) of the abdomen; and/or the presence of pseudomembranes on flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy. We excluded all patients who received IVIG for an indication other than CDC treatment (n = 3). There were no other exclusion criteria.
We used a standardized data collection tool and recorded demographics (age, gender, principal diagnosis), past medical and surgical history, other risk factors for C. difficile infection (previous CDC, antibiotics received during hospital stay, immunosuppressive medications or organ transplantation within the previous 6 weeks, history of malignancy or diabetes mellitus); clinical presentation (abdominal distention, abdominal pain, diarrhea, fever, leukemoid reaction, and hypotension defined as systolic blood pressure <85 mm Hg despite at least 1 L of intravenous normal saline administration and the need for vasopressor use); colonoscopy findings; CT scan and x‐ray findings; laboratory values; date and dose of IVIG infused and other C. difficile pharmacological treatments; and Acute Physiological Assessment and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score28 at the first day of IVIG infusion. The primary outcomes were survival at the end of the hospital stay and clinical disease resolution, defined as 2 formed bowel movements or less per day without abdominal pain or distention.
The decision to initiate IVIG therapy and the dose to be used was made by the individual attending physician.
Statistical Analysis
Single (univariate) and multiple (multivariate) logistic regression analysis were applied to identify variables among the ones collected that are independent predictors of CDC mortality. All statistical analyses were completed with the STATA 10 software package (StatCorp LP, College Station, TX).
Review of the Literature
We used PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and Excerpta Medica databases to search for any publication in a peer‐reviewed journal on the use of IVIG for the treatment of severe CDC. We used the search words: IVIG or intravenous immunoglobulin and clostridium difficile. Only publications published in English were selected. The date range used was January 1, 1950 to January 7, 2009. We were able to find 5 publications using this search criteria.
Results
Study Population
Of the 1230 patients diagnosed with CDC over the 4‐year study period, 21 patients were treated with IVIG. Table 1 summarizes the patients' characteristics. There were 13 women and 8 men. The mean age was 68 years, with a standard deviation (SD) of 13 years. Sepsis was the primary diagnosis in all patients. Sixteen patients had predisposing risk factors for CDC, including immunosuppression (immunosuppressive medication [n = 2], human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] infection [n = 2]); cancer (n = 3); recent surgery (n = 3); and diabetes mellitus (n = 11). Nine patients had documented previous CDC episodes. The indications for IVIG administration were evidence of pancolitis on abdominal CT scan (n = 12) or severe ileus with cessation of diarrhea, abdominal distention, and requirement for total parenteral nutrition (n = 5), or severe hypotension (n = 4) (defined as systolic blood pressure <85 mm Hg despite at least 1 L of intravenous normal saline administration and the subsequent need for vasopressor use).
Patient | Age (gender) | Diagnosis | Medical and Surgical History | CDC History | Colonoscopy Findings | Radiographic Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
A | 40 (female) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Gastric stapling | Yes | * | Diffuse colitis |
B | 86 (female) | Fulminant CDC | Metastatic ovarian carcinoma | PC | No colonic thickening | |
C | 72 (male) | Sepsis | Acute pancreatitis with sec. pseudocyst, DM | Yes | PC | Diffuse colitis |
D | 78 (male) | Discitis | Delayed: normal mucosa | Dilation of small and large bowel | ||
E | 98 (female) | Urosepsis | Yes | * | No bowel distention | |
F | 90 (female) | Right lower extremity cellulitis | DM | * | Concentric thickening of rectal wall | |
G | 64 (male) | Ischemic colitis | DM, recent Hartman pouch closure | Marked inflammation | Diffuse colitis | |
H | 78 (female) | Toe osteomyelitis and CDC with sec. sepsis | DM | * | Diffuse colitis | |
I | 35 (female) | Sepsis | Yes | * | Diffuse nonspecific colitis, minimal ascites | |
J | 47 (female) | Pneumonia and sec. sepsis | * | Diffuse colitis | ||
K | 56 (female) | Urosepsis | HIV | Yes | * | Colitis involving the right colon |
L | 76 (male) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Sigmoid bladder fistula repair, DM | * | Diffuse colitis | |
M | 71 (female) | Pneumonia with sec. sepsis | * | Diffuse colitis | ||
N | 63 (male) | Urosepsis | DM, lymphoma resection from small intestine | PC | Marked small and large bowel distention | |
O | 86 (male) | Enterococcus‐induced sepsis | Rheumatoid arthritis on methotrexate | * | Fat stranding suggesting peritonitis | |
P | 60 (female) | Gastrointestinal bleed and CDC | DM with neuropathy and retinopathies | Yes | * | Thickening of wall of colon in most of the colon |
Q | 57 (female) | Sepsis | DM | Yes | * | Normal |
R | 67 (female) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Candidal esophagitis | Yes | * | Large amount of peritoneal fluid, mild small bowel thickening |
S | 60 (female) | Sepsis sec. to S. aureus and P. aerogenosa | DM, renal transplant (myco, prednisone) | * | Ileus with air fluid level in the small intestine | |
T | 80 (female) | Sepsis | DM | Yes | * | Thickening of descending colon consistent with colitis |
U | 72 (male) | CDC, widespread metastatic cancer | DM, metastatic cancer (unknown primary site) | * | Severe colitis up to the splenic flexure |
Table 2 describes disease severity in these patients. Since CDC starts locally in the colon then secondarily involves multiple organs as part of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), 2 scales were used to characterize the disease in each patient: (1) extent of local colonic inflammation, and (2) severity of systemic involvement. Extensive colonic involvement was evidenced in all patients by pancolitis on abdominal imaging modalities (12 patients), severe ileus requiring total parenteral nutrition (13 patients), or referral for surgical consultation for possible colectomy (12 patients).
Patient | Complications During the Hospital Stay | APACHE II Score | Monitored Unit | WBC* | K | Alb | Lactate | Cr | Hospital Stay (days) | Surgical Consult/Surgery | TPN for Colitis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||||||
A | Sepsis, DIC, ARDS, intubation | 15 | Yes | 48 | 4 | 1.1 | 2.9 | 1.3 | 26 | No/No | Yes |
B | Dehydration, weakness | 12 | No | 19 | 3.4 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 16 | No/No | Yes | |
C | HTP, GI bleed, ischemic colitis, F | 22 | Yes | 21 | 2.7 | 2.5 | 1.3 | ESRD | 34 | Yes/No | Yes |
D | AD, megacolon, HT, intubation, ARF | 18 | Yes | 25 | 3.4 | 1.4 | 1.1 | 2.6 | 52 | Yes/No | Yes |
E | Exacerbation of CHF with respiratory distress, Bipap support, confusion | 21 | No | 10 | 2.6 | 2.3 | 1 | 11 | No/No | No | |
F | Confusion, gout acute attack | 21 | No | 33 | 3.1 | 2.6 | ESRD | 15 | No/No | No | |
G | Intubation, cardiac arrest, AF with RVR, PNA, ARF, DVT, dysphagia, PEG | 6 | Yes | 15 | 3.1 | 1.7 | 1.9 | 2.2 | 32 | Yes/No | Yes |
H | Sepsis, intubation, ARF, PEG, toe amputation, PNA, pulmonary edema, TPN, vitamin D deficiency | 34 | Yes | 59 | 2.8 | 1.5 | 4 | 3.8 | 17 | No/No | Yes |
I | CHF, transient third cranial nerve palsy, DIC | 20 | Yes | 52 | 3.2 | 3.3 | 0.7 | ESRD | 11 | No/No | No |
J | Aspiration PNA, sepsis, DIC, intubation, MI, F, HT | 32 | Yes | 17 | 2.7 | 1.8 | 14 | ESRD | 21 | Yes/no | No |
K | Intubation, cardiac arrest, ARF, DIC, AP, F | 30 | Yes | 25 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 13 | 3.6 | 10 | Yes/no | No |
L | Intubation, ARF, HTP, MI, AD, F | 23 | Yes | 69 | 3.2 | 1.8 | 1.4 | 3.6 | 23 | Yes/no | No |
M | Intubation, DIC, ARF, GI bleeding, hypothermia, AD | 23 | Yes | 47 | 2.8 | 1.4 | 1.4 | 4.3 | 23 | Yes/no | Yes |
N | Intubation, HTP, AD, F, ARF with HD, AF, osteomyelitis | 23 | Yes | 46 | 2.9 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 2.7 | 27 | Yes/no | Yes |
O | Intubation, ARF, 2 cardiac arrests, GI bleed, UTI, rhabdomyolysis, liver shock, AF | 31 | Yes | 49 | 2.5 | 1.1 | 2.3 | 2.9 | 25 | Yes/no | Yes |
P | Bowel ischemia with bowel resection, ARF, MI, ischemic bowel, fluid overload, respiratory failure | 23 | Yes | 26 | 2.6 | 0.8 | 2.9 | 3.1 | 9 | Yes/Yes | Yes |
Q | Pulmonary embolism | 39 | Yes | 23 | 2.8 | 1.1 | 8.1 | ESRD | 9 | No/No | Yes |
R | Fungal peritonitis, aspiration pneumonia, cardiac arrest | 26 | Yes | 30 | 4.1 | 1.1 | 0.9 | ESRD | 36 | No/No | Yes |
S | Intubation, pneumothorax, CRT, pressor‐dependent shock, ARF | 36 | Yes | 46 | 3.1 | 1.8 | 2.1 | 5.4 | 64 | Yes/Yes | No |
T | Pressor‐dependent sepsis, pulmonary edema, ARF with HD | 36 | Yes | 35 | 3.3 | 1.3 | 1.8 | 5.5 | 11 | Yes/No | Yes |
U | Sepsis | 34 | Yes | 58 | 3.1 | 2.2 | 3.3 | 1.6 | 9 | No/No | No |
Of the 21 patients treated with IVIG, 9 did not receive a surgical consultation either because they responded to medical treatment promptly (6 patients), were too unstable for surgery (2 patients), or because the patient/family refused surgery (1 patient). Of the 12 patients who received surgical consultation, 2 underwent surgery. The remainder did not proceed to surgery for the following reasons: they were deemed medically unstable for surgery (6 patients), declined surgery (2 patients), were diagnosed with cancer on colonoscopy (1 patient), or improved with medical treatment (1 patient).
The severity of systemic involvement was measured using the APACHE II score on day 1 of IVIG infusion. The mean APACHE II score was 25. Eighteen patients were in a monitored unit when IVIG was administered. The study group had laboratory results in keeping with those previously used to define severe colitis:4, 9, 19 leukocytosis (defined as white blood cell count higher than 12,000 cells/mL [mean = 36,000 cells/mL]), hypoalbuminemia (mean = 1.78 g/dL, SD = 0.68 g/dL), hypokalemia (mean = 3.02 mg/dL, SD = 0.47 g/dL), and acute renal failure (defined as serum creatinine level >1.5 mg/dL [mean = 2.98 mg/dL, SD = 1.42 g/dL]).
IVIG Use
Table 3 describes the treatment patients received for CDC as well as the total number of antibiotics used throughout the hospital stay. IVIG was used as adjuvant treatment (defined as IVIG administration within 4 days or less after CDC diagnosis) in 8 patients and as second‐line treatment (defined as IVIG administration more than 4 days after CDC diagnosis) in 13 patients. Metronidazole, vancomycin, cholestyramine, and probiotic treatment alone or in different combinations were used for an average of 8 days (SD = 8 days; range, 025 days) before IVIG infusion. The total IVIG dose administered varied depending on the prescribing attending, with a range of 200 mg/kg to 1250 mg/kg and a mode of 250 mg/kg for 1 to 3 days. An average of 5 (SD = 2) different antibiotics that were not active against C. difficile were used per patient without being discontinued after a CDC diagnosis was made. The 3 most common were: cephalosporins (cefazolin, ceftriaxone, cefepime), fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin), and combination antibiotics (piperacillin and tazobactam or ampicillin and sulbactam).
Patient | Number of Antibiotics | Duration of Treatment Before IVIG (days) | Treatment Before IVIG (days) | Total CDC Treatment (days) | IgG Level | IVIG Dose |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
A | 5 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (7), Choles (2) | Oral and rectal Vanc (26,19), IV Metro (19), Choles (2), Lacto (6) | Low | 300 mg/kg for 1 day |
B | 1 | 13 | Metro (13), Vanc (13) | Oral Vanc (17) and IV Metro (12) | 300 mg/kg for 1 day | |
C | 3 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (3) | IV Metro (28),Vanc oral and enema (18,3), Lacto (10) | Low | 125 mg/kg for 5 days |
D | 5 | 25 | Metro (25), Vanc (15) | Oral then IV Metro (10,15), oral Vanc (25), Choles (7) and Lacto (13) | Low | 200 mg/kg for 1 day |
E | 1 | 4 | Metro (1), Vanc (4), Choles(4) | IV Metro (8), oral Vanc (10) and Choles (4) | 75 mg/kg for 5 days | |
F | 4 | 2 | Metro (2), Vanc (1) | IV Metro (8) and oral Vanc (9) | 250 mg/kg for 5 days | |
G | 3 | 17 | Metro (17), Vanc (14) | IV Metro (49) and oral Vanc (61) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
H | 5 | 1 | Metro (1), Vanc (1) | Oral Metro (18), oral Vanc (22 ), IV Metro (3) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
I | 6 | 1 | Metro (1) | Oral and IV Metro (7,9), Vanc oral and enema (8,3) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
J | 8 | 16 | Metro (14), Vanc (2), Lacto (6) | Oral then IV Metro (10,5), oral and rectal Vanc (3,1), Lacto (6) | 300 mg/ kg for 1 day | |
K | 6 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (3) | Oral then IV Metro (10) and oral Vanc (9) | Normal | 400 mg/kg for 2 days |
L | 4 | 0 | None | IV then oral Metro (7,10), oral Vanc (23), Choles (7), and Lacto (5) | 150 mg/kg for 5 days | |
M | 6 | 1 | Metro (1) | IV Metro (23) and oral Vanc (9) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
N | 7 | 1 | Metro (1), Vanc (1) | IV Metro (16), oral Vanc (14), oral Metro (7) | 250 mg /kg for 2 days | |
O | 6 | 7 | Metro (6), Vanc (4) | IV Metro (6) and oral Vanc (22) | Low | 250 mg/kg for 2 days |
P | 3 | 6 | Metro (6), Vanc (6) | IV Metro (25) and oral Vanc (17) | 150 mg/kg fro 3 days | |
Q | 3 | 4 | Metro (4), Vanc (3) | Oral Metro (8),Vanc oral and enema (6,3) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
R | 5 | 9 | Vanc (9) | Vanc oral and enema (5,4), IV Metro (2) | 250 mg/kg for 1 day | |
S | 8 | 23 | Metro (23), Vanc (23) | Oral then IV Metro (12,22), oral Vanc (39) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
T | 4 | 6 | Metro (6), Vanc (1) | Oral Vanc and IV Metro (11) | 250 mg/kg for 1 day | |
U | 4 | 2 | Metro (2), Vanc (2) | Oral Vanc and IV Metro (6) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days |
Survival with IVIG Use
Nine patients (43%) survived their illness and were discharged from the hospital. They experienced complete clinical resolution after an average of 10 days from IVIG administration (range, 220 days) (Table 4). The other 12 patients (57%) died during the index hospitalization. The average length of stay was 23 (range, 964) days.0
Patient | Disposition | Clearance of Clostridium difficile Colitis? | Days to Resolution |
---|---|---|---|
| |||
A | Alive | Loose BM persisted but diarrhea resolved 9 days after IVIG. | 9 |
B | Alive | BM became formed and diarrhea resolved 48 hours after IVIG. | 2 |
C | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 20 days post‐IVIG infusion. CAT scan: colonic thickening improved. | 20 |
D | Alive | Diarrhea resolved on discharge. Response to IVIG started next day after administration. | 18 |
E | Alive | Diarrhea improved next day after IVIG administration and resolved on discharge. | 5 |
F | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 5 days after IVIG administration. | 5 |
G | Alive | Diarrhea resolved. C. difficile test became negative. | 13 |
H | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 2 days before discharge. | 15 |
I | Alive | Diarrhea slowly improved and resolved 4 days before discharge. | 7 |
J | Deceased | ||
K | Deceased | ||
L | Deceased | ||
M | Deceased | ||
N | Deceased | ||
O | Deceased | ||
P | Deceased | ||
Q | Deceased | ||
R | Deceased | ||
S | Deceased | ||
T | Deceased | ||
U | Deceased |
Study | Number of Patients | Age (SD) (years) | Male | Female | Severity Definition | IVIG Dose | Days to Resolution | Days IVIG Infused | Alive? (%) | Recurrence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
Salcedo et al.22 | 2 | 63, 64 | 1 | 1 | Pancolitis or thumbprinting on CAT scan | 200300 mg/kg once | 12 | 59 | 100 | 1 out of 2 |
McPherson et al.21 | 8 | 72 (12) | ? | ? | Pancolitis | 200400 mg/kg twice | 226 | 1165 | 75 | 2 out of 6 |
Juang et al.25 | 18 | 67 (17.4) | 5 | 13 | Modified Rubin et al.9 criteria | 200300 mg/kg once | ? | ? | 83 | ? |
Hassoun et al.24 | 1 | 72 | 1 | 0 | Pancolitis | 400 mg/kg once | 6 | 15 | 100 | None |
Chandrasekar et al.23 | 1 | 67 | 0 | 1 | Shock requiring inotropic support and pseudomembranes on colonoscopy | 400 mg/kg for 5 doses | 16 | 35 | 100 | ? |
This paper | 21 | 68 (16) | 7 | 14 | Pancolitis and APACHE II score | 300 mg/kg once; 250 mg/kg for 5 doses | 220 | 025 | 43 | ? |
To further assess the impact of IVIG on colitis resolution, we investigated all variables in the data set that may have been associated with mortality using univariate Cox regression analysis. Those variables were as follows: APACHE II score on the first day of IVIG infusion, age, sex, previous history of CDC, number of days before IVIG use, peak white blood cell count, serum potassium level and creatinine level, lactate level on first day of IVIG infusion, and number of antibiotics administered that are not active against CDC. Only the APACHE II score (P = 0.006) and lactate level on the day of IVIG infusion (P = 0.004) were (positively) associated with CDC mortality. The positive association between CDC mortality and APACHE II score remained significant (P = 0.04) after adjusting for sex, previous history of CDC, number of days before IVIG use, lactate level on first day of IVIG infusion, and number of antibiotics administered that are not active against CDC using a multivariate Cox regression analysis model. No adjustments were made for age, white blood cell count, potassium level, or creatinine level as those are included within the APACHE II score. The positive association between lactate level on the first day of IVIG infusion and CDC mortality was not statistically significant after adjusting for the factors listed above in the same model (P = 0.13).
Discussion
To our knowledge, the present study is the largest series published in the literature to date on the use of IVIG for severe CDC. It is also the first study to report a high mortality rate compared to the 5 previous smaller studies on this topic. In the first report on IVIG use for CDC, Leung et al.15 used IVIG to treat 5 pediatric patients suffering from chronic relapsing CDC. It was not until 7 years later, in 1997, that the first IVIG use for severe CDC was reported.22 Since then, a total of 13 works have been published on IVIG for CDC treatment, and only in 5 of these was IVIG administered for severe CDC treatment:2125 3 case reports, 1 case series, and 1 case‐control study. Although the 4 uncontrolled reports concluded that IVIG is beneficial for severe CDC, the only controlled study reported no significant difference between cases and controls for all‐cause mortality, length of stay, and colectomy rate.25
The definition of severe CDC varied between reports, making comparison difficult. McPherson et al.21 and Hassoun and Ibrahim24 defined severe disease as one causing pancolitis on CT scan either with or without megacolon. In the study by Juang et al.,25 disease severity was assessed using the modified criteria of Rubin et al.9 Salcedo et al.22 defined severe CDC as one causing pancolitis in one patient and thumbprinting on CT scan in another, whereas Chandrasekar et al.23 defined it as one causing shock requiring inotropic support and presence of pseudomembranes on colonoscopy.
The present report is unique in that it provided 2 scales to characterize disease in each patient. The first scale measured colonic involvement anatomically and physiologically using a combination of computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan findings, presence or absence of ileus or referral for possible colectomy. This is not a prognostic scale, however, since CAT scan findings have been previously shown to be poor predictors of treatment outcome.29 The second scale measured the severity of systemic involvement using a well‐validated and standardized scale, the APACHE II score. We have shown in this report that it is associated with prognosis in the context of IVIG use.
Our study reports a higher mortality rate than previously described, and suggests that risk stratification and patient selection are important before IVIG administration, since not all patients seem to benefit from this treatment as previously suggested by smaller case series. Previously, several physical findings and laboratory values were found to be associated with worse outcome in CDC. These were increasing age, immunosuppression, shock requiring vasopressors, peak white blood cell count, peak serum lactate level, hypoalbuminemia, a fall in serum albumin level of >1.1 g/dL at the onset of CDC symptoms, use of 3 or more antibiotics, comorbid disease, previous history of CDC, acute renal failure and hypotension, underlying altered or depressed mental status, abdominal pain or distention, white blood cell count over 20,000/mm3 or <1500/mm3 and/or a >10% band forms on the white blood cell differential count, and ascites or pneumatosis coli by abdominal imaging.9, 3033 Using the APACHE II scale for the same purpose has the advantage of utilizing a well‐validated and objective scale that is expected to measure the degree of systemic involvement more reliably compared to the clinical and laboratory values above.
Timing of IVIG infusion remains controversial. Due to the lack of randomized controlled trials, the current practice is guided by expert opinion, leading to wide variations between reports. Since the APACHE II score was positively associated with mortality in the setting of IVIG treatment, the same scale could be used to guide decisions regarding timing of IVIG infusion. Our results suggest that IVIG should be preferentially used while the APACHE II score is still relatively low. This association and the specific APACHE II score at which to initiate or hold treatment need to be validated in the setting of a randomized controlled study before being used in clinical practice.
Although the current study was not designed to test this theory, IVIG could be associated conceptually with treatment success for patients with severe disease that is still restricted to the colon (without other organ dysfunction or at least at an early stage of extracolonic organ failure and thus associated with a low APACHE II score) but not for severe colonic disease with secondary multiple organ failure (high APACHE II score). This may be because colonic disease is toxin‐mediated whereas secondary systemic involvement is mediated through toxin‐induced inflammatory mediators (interleukin‐8, macrophage‐inflammatory protein‐2, substance P, tumor necrosis factor‐alpha) released locally in the colon,3436 triggering a SIRS and hematogenous translocation of colonic bacteria,37 both of which are poorly responsive to immunoglobulin infusion. Along the same lines, waiting for failure of conventional therapy before IVIG use might result in IVIG treatment failure because of disease progression and secondary sepsis, at which point no treatment may be effective. No study thus far has addressed this issue specifically.
Overall, the combined cohort of patients with severe CDC treated with IVIG in the literature includes 51 patients (Table 4). The current report contributes 41% of these patients. The patients' average age was 68 years, with a 2 to 1 female‐male ratio. The dose of IVIG used varied largely also, with 400 mg/kg being the mode (range, 75400 mg/kg from 1 to 5 doses). This dose is significantly below the doses used in the treatment of other diseases, like Guillain‐Barr syndrome, myasthenia gravis, Kawasaki disease, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, agammaglobulinemia, and hypogammaglobulinemia, where the usual dose is 400 mg/kg for 5 days. The resolution of diarrhea in these cases occurred after an average of 9 (range, 142) days. The index hospitalization survival rate varied from 43% to 100%. Patients received standard treatment for an average of 13 (range, 065) days before IVIG infusion. Thirty‐two of 51 patients survived their illness (63%). Neither total IgG nor anti‐toxin A IgG levels were measured in any of the reports. Of the 32 patients who had clinical resolution, 3 (10%) experienced symptoms recurrence in a follow‐up period of 1 to 13 months. This number is most probably an underestimation of the true recurrence rate resulting from an incomplete reporting because there was no uniform or active recurrence ascertainment mechanism in any of the studies. The recurrences were at 10, 14, and 30 days posttreatment. Since standard treatment was not discontinued in any of the reports once IVIG was given, the relative contribution and the ideal timing for IVIG infusion are still unclear.
The mechanism of action of IVIG is passive immunization (with anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies present in the pooled immunoglobulin) of a host who is usually unable to mount an adequate protective immune response.15, 22 IVIG is formed from pooling immunoglobulin from several random donors. It has been shown that many such donors express high anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibody serum titers.38, 39 In addition, high levels of anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies were present in the IVIG preparations and the recipients after infusion.1517, 22 Although constituting only a small fraction of the total IVIG administered, these antitoxin antibodies are believed to neutralize toxin A and B and help the host recover from the disease. In fact, Babcock et al.40 used an experimental hamster model of CDC to demonstrate a mortality reduction from 100% to 55% postinfusion of combined anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies. While some early reports indicated that anti‐toxin B antibodies were the major determinants of protection against colitis,41 later reports correlated disease severity pathologically42 and clinically43, 44 with anti‐toxin A levels. Anti‐toxin B antibodies were later shown to play an adjunctive role in conferring immunity against CDC40, 45, 46 when added to anti‐toxin A antibodies, but not to have any significant role on their own.
However, IVIG has been shown to contain IgG, but not IgA, anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies while it is only the IgA class of anti‐toxin A antibodies, and not the IgG class, that could neutralize toxin A in vitro and in vivo.47, 48 Babcock et al.40 solved this apparent dilemma by showing that a combination of 3 different monoclonal IgG anti‐toxin A antibodies could neutralize toxin A activity in vitro and prevent disease in the hamster model in vivo. Each of the 3 antibodies recognized a different toxin A domain: the first neutralized toxin A enzymatic activity, while the second prevented toxin A binding to its receptor on enterocytes, and the third prevented toxin internalization after binding to the receptor.
Thus, the mechanism of action of IVIG is most likely through the transfer of IgG anti‐toxin A antibodies that gain access to the intestinal lumen presumably secondary to inflammation‐induced mucosal damage and neutralize toxin A. Transfer of yet undetected IgA anti‐toxin A antibodies that prevent toxin A from binding to its receptor is much less likely, although possible.
The present study has limitations. As in all retrospective studies, selection bias was unavoidable. In addition, the decision to initiate IVIG administration was dependent on the attending physician, who also decided the dose, leading to heterogeneity in the total dose of IVIG infused. Such heterogeneity, however, is primarily the result of a lack of a standard dose for IVIG infusion for CDC in the published literature, as reported above. In addition, since IVIG is not yet approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of severe CDC, standard treatment was not discontinued in any of the reports to date, including ours.
Choosing appropriate controls for patients suffering from severe CDC is challenging. This patient population is usually frail, with severe and multiple underlying diseases. The deteriorating clinical condition (and subsequently the need for multiple antibiotics) may be either the result of or the cause of CDC. Furthermore, IVIG has been in short supply for several years and therefore it has been expensive, making its administration to the number of patients needed to design adequately‐powered controlled studies difficult. These are mainly the reasons no randomized, multicenter, placebo‐controlled trial on IVIG use in severe CDC has been conducted to date.
Conclusions
In the present study, we report the results of IVIG use for the treatment of 21 patients with severe CDC. This is the largest cohort to our knowledge in the literature. Unlike previous studies on the subject, the present report provided 2 scales for disease assessment: the first based on the extent of colonic involvement and the second measuring the severity of systemic involvement using the APACHE II score. The latter was positively associated with mortality in this context. Of the 21 study patients treated with IVIG, only 9 patients (43%) survived their illness. This is the highest reported mortality rate among all studies on this subject so far. Further studies on the ideal timing of IVIG infusion, dose, and patient selection are needed before accepting IVIG as a standard of care for severe CDC treatment. The role of APACHE II score in the decision to use IVIG is promising and should be validated in randomized controlled trials.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Indrani Mukherjee, MD, for her help and expertise in proofreading the manuscript.
- Secular trends in hospital‐acquired Clostridium difficile disease in the United States, 1987–2001.J Infect Dis.2004;189:1585–1589. , , .
- Fulminant Clostridium difficile: an underappreciated and increasing cause of death and complications.Ann Surg.2002;235:363–372. , , , et al.
- An epidemic, toxin gene‐variant strain of Clostridium difficile.N Engl J Med.2005;353:2433–2441. , , , et al.
- Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea in a region of Quebec from 1991 to 2003: a changing pattern of disease severity.CMAJ.2004;171:466–472. , , , et al.
- Comparison of two toxins produced by Clostridium difficile.Infect Immun.1981;34:1036–1043. , , .
- Asymptomatic carriage of Clostridium difficile and serum levels of IgG antibody against toxin A.N Engl J Med.2000;342:390–397. , , , .
- Human antibody response to Clostridium difficile toxin A in relation to clinical course of infection.Infect Immun.1994;62:384–389. , , , .
- Risk factors for Clostridium difficile carriage and C. difficile‐associated diarrhea in a cohort of hospitalized patients.J Infect Dis.1990;162:678–684. , , .
- Severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Dis Colon Rectum.1995;38:350–354. , , .
- A predominantly clonal multi‐institutional outbreak of Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea with high morbidity and mortality.N Engl J Med.2005;353:2442–2449. , , et al.
- Factors associated with failure of metronidazole in Clostridium difficile‐associated disease.J Clin Gastroenterol.2004;38:414–418. , , .
- Treatment of Clostridium difficile‐associated disease: old therapies and new strategies.Lancet Infect Dis.2005;5:549–557. , , .
- Relatively poor outcome after treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis with metronidazole.Clin Infect Dis.2005;40:1586–1590. , , , et al.
- Increasing risk of relapse after treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis in Quebec, Canada.Clin Infect Dis.2005;40:1591–1597. , , , et al.
- Treatment with intravenously administered gamma globulin of chronic relapsing colitis induced by Clostridium difficile toxin.J Pediatr.1991;118:633–637. , , , , , .
- Gamma globulin administration in relapsing Clostridium difficile‐induced pseudomembranous colitis with a defective antibody response to toxin A.Acta Clin Belg.1995;50:36–39. , , , .
- Recurrent Clostridium difficile infection in a patient with selective IgG1 deficiency treated with intravenous immune globulin and Saccharomyces boulardii.Clin Infect Dis.1995;20(suppl 2):S266–S268. , , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.Gut.2002;51:456. .
- Descriptive study of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.J Antimicrob Chemother.2004;53:882–884. .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for resistant Clostridium difficile infection.Age Ageing.2006;35:85–86. , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe, refractory, and recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhea.Dis Colon Rectum.2006;49:640–645. , , , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Gut.1997;41:366–370. , , , et al.
- Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for refractory Clostridium difficile toxin colitis in chronic kidney disease: case reports and literature review.NDT Plus.2008;1:20–22. , , , et. al.
- Use of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Am J Geriatr Pharmacother.2007;5:48–51. , .
- Clinical outcomes of intravenous immune globulin in severe clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea.Am J Infect Control.2007;35:131–137. , , , et al.
- Successful treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis with intravenous immunoglobulin.J Gastrointestin Liver Dis.2008;17:353–359. , , , .
- A durable response to relapsing Clostridium difficile colitis may require combined therapy with high‐dose oral Vancomycin and intravenous immune globulin.Infect Dis Clin Pract.2006;14:217–220. , , , et al.
- APACHE II: a severity of disease classification system.Crit Care Med.1985;13:818–829. , , , .
- Colonic abnormalities on CT in adult hospitalized patients with Clostridium difficile colitis: prevalence and significance of findings.AJR Am J Roentgenol.2006;186:1393–1400. , , , , , .
- Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea: predictors of severity in patients presenting to the emergency department.Can J Gastroenterol.2003;17:369–373. , , , .
- Impact of emergency colectomy on survival of patients with fulminant Clostridium difficile colitis during an epidemic caused by a hypervirulent strain.Ann Surg.2007;245:267–272. , , , et al.
- Risk factors for severity and relapse of pseudomembranous colitis in an elderly population.Colorectal Dis.2007;9:173–177. , , et al.
- Prognostic criteria in Clostridium difficile colitis.Am J Gastroenterol.1996;91:460–464. , , , , .
- Clostridium difficile toxin a stimulates macrophage‐inflammatory protein‐2 production in rat intestinal epithelial cells.J Immunol.1998;160:6039–6045. , , , et al.
- Increased substance P responses in dorsal root ganglia, intestinal macrophages during Clostridium difficile toxin a enteritis in rats.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.1997;94:4788–4793. , , , et al.
- Cytokine response by human monocytes to Clostridium difficile toxin a and toxin B.Infect Immun.1991;59:3659–3666. , , , , , .
- Bacterial translocation, intestinal microflora and morphological changes of intestinal mucosa in experimental models of Clostridium difficile infection.J Med Microbiol.1998;47:591–598. , , , .
- Immunoglobulin G directed against toxins A and B of Clostridium difficile in the general population and patients with antibiotic‐associated diarrhea.Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis.1994;18:205–209. , .
- Serum antibody response to toxins A and B of Clostridium difficile.J Infect Dis.1983;148:93–100. , , , et al.
- Human monoclonal antibodies directed against toxins A and B prevent Clostridium difficile‐induced mortality in hamsters.Infect Immun.2006;74:6339–6347. , , , et al.
- Serum antibody response to Clostridium difficile toxins in patients with Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.Infection.1985;13:97–101. , , , .
- Relationship between levels of Clostridium difficile toxin A and toxin B and cecal lesions in gnotobiotic mice.Infect Immun.1989;57:2123–2127. , , , .
- Protection against experimental pseudomembranous colitis in gnotobiotic mice by use of monoclonal antibodies against Clostridium difficile toxin A.Infect Immun.1991;59:1192–1195. , , , , .
- Systemic and mucosal antibody responses to toxin A in patients infected with Clostridium difficile.J Infect Dis.1992;166:1287–1294. , , .
- Transcutaneous immunization with Clostridium difficile toxoid A induces systemic and mucosal immune responses and toxin A‐neutralizing antibodies in mice.Infect Immun.2007;75:2826–2832. , , , et al.
- Serum antitoxin antibodies mediate systemic and mucosal protection from Clostridium difficile disease in hamsters.Infect Immun.1999;67:527–538. , , , et al.
- Human colonic aspirates containing immunoglobulin A antibody to Clostridium difficile toxin A inhibit toxin A‐receptor binding.Gastroenterology.1992;102:35–40. , , , .
- Selective neutralization of a bacterial enterotoxin by serum immunoglobulin A in response to mucosal disease.Infect Immun.1995;63:3166–3173. , , , , .
Clostridium difficile colitis (CDC) is the most common cause of hospital‐acquired diarrhea.1 The incidence of CDC has sharply increased over the past decade despite increasing awareness among health care professionals.24 C. difficile pathogenic strains induce diarrhea through the elaboration and secretion of 2 exotoxins: toxin A and toxin B. Toxin A is an inflammatory toxin, leading to fluid secretion, increased mucosal permeability, and marked enteritis and colitis.5 Toxin B is cytotoxic, leading to cell injury and apoptosis.5 Combined, toxin A and toxin B can cause a wide spectrum of clinical presentations, ranging from mild diarrhea that resolves with the discontinuation of antibiotics to a fulminant colitis requiring surgical intervention.
The severity of clinical manifestations has been shown to be inversely proportional to the host anti‐toxin A antibody level in response to toxin exposure. Kyne et al.6 demonstrated that asymptomatic C. difficile carriers produced significantly higher anti‐toxin A immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels compared to symptomatic patients. Among the latter group, patients with mild disease had a higher antibody level compared to those with severe colitis.6, 7 Additional risk factors predisposing to severe colitis are advanced age, severe underlying illness,8 and immunocompromised state.9
Recently, a new C. difficile strain (BI/NAP1) with a mutated toxin A and toxin B promoter silencer, a binary toxin gene, and fluoroquinolone resistance has been described in Canada and the United States.3, 10 This strain has been associated with an increased incidence of CDC among hospitalized patients, especially the incidence of severe disease requiring colectomy. At the same time, several reports describing metronidazole treatment failure have been published.1114 These recent findings emphasize the importance of finding alternative treatments for CDC.
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) was used to treat CDC for the first time in 1991.15 Since then, 12 case reports and small case series, along with 1 case‐control study have been published documenting IVIG treatment outcomes.1527 However, only 5 reports to date examined patients with severe CDC.2125 In the present study, we report the largest series of patients with severe CDC treated with IVIG in the literature to our knowledge.
Patients and Methods
Case Series
We used CareScience software (CareScience, Inc., Philadelphia, PA) to retrospectively identify all patients admitted to our institution with a primary or secondary diagnosis of CDC (code 00845) between July 1, 2002 and May 1, 2006. CareScience is commercially available software that tracks all admissions to our institution and allows the performance of patient searches with a wide spectrum of user‐defined search criteria. Using the same software, we further identified those patients who received IVIG during their hospital stay. We then obtained the hospital chart for each patient, from the medical records department and established the study database.
A case was defined as a patient with diarrhea (at least 3 loose stools daily) for at least 2 days who had C. difficile cytotoxin‐positive feces and at least 1 of the following criteria: clinical symptoms (abdominal pain and/or distension and fever); leukemoid reaction (defined as white blood cell count of 20,000 cells/mm3 or above. This cutoff value was chosen as it has been used previously as a prognostic factor)4; radiographic evidence of colitis by computed tomography (CT) of the abdomen; and/or the presence of pseudomembranes on flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy. We excluded all patients who received IVIG for an indication other than CDC treatment (n = 3). There were no other exclusion criteria.
We used a standardized data collection tool and recorded demographics (age, gender, principal diagnosis), past medical and surgical history, other risk factors for C. difficile infection (previous CDC, antibiotics received during hospital stay, immunosuppressive medications or organ transplantation within the previous 6 weeks, history of malignancy or diabetes mellitus); clinical presentation (abdominal distention, abdominal pain, diarrhea, fever, leukemoid reaction, and hypotension defined as systolic blood pressure <85 mm Hg despite at least 1 L of intravenous normal saline administration and the need for vasopressor use); colonoscopy findings; CT scan and x‐ray findings; laboratory values; date and dose of IVIG infused and other C. difficile pharmacological treatments; and Acute Physiological Assessment and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score28 at the first day of IVIG infusion. The primary outcomes were survival at the end of the hospital stay and clinical disease resolution, defined as 2 formed bowel movements or less per day without abdominal pain or distention.
The decision to initiate IVIG therapy and the dose to be used was made by the individual attending physician.
Statistical Analysis
Single (univariate) and multiple (multivariate) logistic regression analysis were applied to identify variables among the ones collected that are independent predictors of CDC mortality. All statistical analyses were completed with the STATA 10 software package (StatCorp LP, College Station, TX).
Review of the Literature
We used PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and Excerpta Medica databases to search for any publication in a peer‐reviewed journal on the use of IVIG for the treatment of severe CDC. We used the search words: IVIG or intravenous immunoglobulin and clostridium difficile. Only publications published in English were selected. The date range used was January 1, 1950 to January 7, 2009. We were able to find 5 publications using this search criteria.
Results
Study Population
Of the 1230 patients diagnosed with CDC over the 4‐year study period, 21 patients were treated with IVIG. Table 1 summarizes the patients' characteristics. There were 13 women and 8 men. The mean age was 68 years, with a standard deviation (SD) of 13 years. Sepsis was the primary diagnosis in all patients. Sixteen patients had predisposing risk factors for CDC, including immunosuppression (immunosuppressive medication [n = 2], human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] infection [n = 2]); cancer (n = 3); recent surgery (n = 3); and diabetes mellitus (n = 11). Nine patients had documented previous CDC episodes. The indications for IVIG administration were evidence of pancolitis on abdominal CT scan (n = 12) or severe ileus with cessation of diarrhea, abdominal distention, and requirement for total parenteral nutrition (n = 5), or severe hypotension (n = 4) (defined as systolic blood pressure <85 mm Hg despite at least 1 L of intravenous normal saline administration and the subsequent need for vasopressor use).
Patient | Age (gender) | Diagnosis | Medical and Surgical History | CDC History | Colonoscopy Findings | Radiographic Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
A | 40 (female) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Gastric stapling | Yes | * | Diffuse colitis |
B | 86 (female) | Fulminant CDC | Metastatic ovarian carcinoma | PC | No colonic thickening | |
C | 72 (male) | Sepsis | Acute pancreatitis with sec. pseudocyst, DM | Yes | PC | Diffuse colitis |
D | 78 (male) | Discitis | Delayed: normal mucosa | Dilation of small and large bowel | ||
E | 98 (female) | Urosepsis | Yes | * | No bowel distention | |
F | 90 (female) | Right lower extremity cellulitis | DM | * | Concentric thickening of rectal wall | |
G | 64 (male) | Ischemic colitis | DM, recent Hartman pouch closure | Marked inflammation | Diffuse colitis | |
H | 78 (female) | Toe osteomyelitis and CDC with sec. sepsis | DM | * | Diffuse colitis | |
I | 35 (female) | Sepsis | Yes | * | Diffuse nonspecific colitis, minimal ascites | |
J | 47 (female) | Pneumonia and sec. sepsis | * | Diffuse colitis | ||
K | 56 (female) | Urosepsis | HIV | Yes | * | Colitis involving the right colon |
L | 76 (male) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Sigmoid bladder fistula repair, DM | * | Diffuse colitis | |
M | 71 (female) | Pneumonia with sec. sepsis | * | Diffuse colitis | ||
N | 63 (male) | Urosepsis | DM, lymphoma resection from small intestine | PC | Marked small and large bowel distention | |
O | 86 (male) | Enterococcus‐induced sepsis | Rheumatoid arthritis on methotrexate | * | Fat stranding suggesting peritonitis | |
P | 60 (female) | Gastrointestinal bleed and CDC | DM with neuropathy and retinopathies | Yes | * | Thickening of wall of colon in most of the colon |
Q | 57 (female) | Sepsis | DM | Yes | * | Normal |
R | 67 (female) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Candidal esophagitis | Yes | * | Large amount of peritoneal fluid, mild small bowel thickening |
S | 60 (female) | Sepsis sec. to S. aureus and P. aerogenosa | DM, renal transplant (myco, prednisone) | * | Ileus with air fluid level in the small intestine | |
T | 80 (female) | Sepsis | DM | Yes | * | Thickening of descending colon consistent with colitis |
U | 72 (male) | CDC, widespread metastatic cancer | DM, metastatic cancer (unknown primary site) | * | Severe colitis up to the splenic flexure |
Table 2 describes disease severity in these patients. Since CDC starts locally in the colon then secondarily involves multiple organs as part of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), 2 scales were used to characterize the disease in each patient: (1) extent of local colonic inflammation, and (2) severity of systemic involvement. Extensive colonic involvement was evidenced in all patients by pancolitis on abdominal imaging modalities (12 patients), severe ileus requiring total parenteral nutrition (13 patients), or referral for surgical consultation for possible colectomy (12 patients).
Patient | Complications During the Hospital Stay | APACHE II Score | Monitored Unit | WBC* | K | Alb | Lactate | Cr | Hospital Stay (days) | Surgical Consult/Surgery | TPN for Colitis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||||||
A | Sepsis, DIC, ARDS, intubation | 15 | Yes | 48 | 4 | 1.1 | 2.9 | 1.3 | 26 | No/No | Yes |
B | Dehydration, weakness | 12 | No | 19 | 3.4 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 16 | No/No | Yes | |
C | HTP, GI bleed, ischemic colitis, F | 22 | Yes | 21 | 2.7 | 2.5 | 1.3 | ESRD | 34 | Yes/No | Yes |
D | AD, megacolon, HT, intubation, ARF | 18 | Yes | 25 | 3.4 | 1.4 | 1.1 | 2.6 | 52 | Yes/No | Yes |
E | Exacerbation of CHF with respiratory distress, Bipap support, confusion | 21 | No | 10 | 2.6 | 2.3 | 1 | 11 | No/No | No | |
F | Confusion, gout acute attack | 21 | No | 33 | 3.1 | 2.6 | ESRD | 15 | No/No | No | |
G | Intubation, cardiac arrest, AF with RVR, PNA, ARF, DVT, dysphagia, PEG | 6 | Yes | 15 | 3.1 | 1.7 | 1.9 | 2.2 | 32 | Yes/No | Yes |
H | Sepsis, intubation, ARF, PEG, toe amputation, PNA, pulmonary edema, TPN, vitamin D deficiency | 34 | Yes | 59 | 2.8 | 1.5 | 4 | 3.8 | 17 | No/No | Yes |
I | CHF, transient third cranial nerve palsy, DIC | 20 | Yes | 52 | 3.2 | 3.3 | 0.7 | ESRD | 11 | No/No | No |
J | Aspiration PNA, sepsis, DIC, intubation, MI, F, HT | 32 | Yes | 17 | 2.7 | 1.8 | 14 | ESRD | 21 | Yes/no | No |
K | Intubation, cardiac arrest, ARF, DIC, AP, F | 30 | Yes | 25 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 13 | 3.6 | 10 | Yes/no | No |
L | Intubation, ARF, HTP, MI, AD, F | 23 | Yes | 69 | 3.2 | 1.8 | 1.4 | 3.6 | 23 | Yes/no | No |
M | Intubation, DIC, ARF, GI bleeding, hypothermia, AD | 23 | Yes | 47 | 2.8 | 1.4 | 1.4 | 4.3 | 23 | Yes/no | Yes |
N | Intubation, HTP, AD, F, ARF with HD, AF, osteomyelitis | 23 | Yes | 46 | 2.9 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 2.7 | 27 | Yes/no | Yes |
O | Intubation, ARF, 2 cardiac arrests, GI bleed, UTI, rhabdomyolysis, liver shock, AF | 31 | Yes | 49 | 2.5 | 1.1 | 2.3 | 2.9 | 25 | Yes/no | Yes |
P | Bowel ischemia with bowel resection, ARF, MI, ischemic bowel, fluid overload, respiratory failure | 23 | Yes | 26 | 2.6 | 0.8 | 2.9 | 3.1 | 9 | Yes/Yes | Yes |
Q | Pulmonary embolism | 39 | Yes | 23 | 2.8 | 1.1 | 8.1 | ESRD | 9 | No/No | Yes |
R | Fungal peritonitis, aspiration pneumonia, cardiac arrest | 26 | Yes | 30 | 4.1 | 1.1 | 0.9 | ESRD | 36 | No/No | Yes |
S | Intubation, pneumothorax, CRT, pressor‐dependent shock, ARF | 36 | Yes | 46 | 3.1 | 1.8 | 2.1 | 5.4 | 64 | Yes/Yes | No |
T | Pressor‐dependent sepsis, pulmonary edema, ARF with HD | 36 | Yes | 35 | 3.3 | 1.3 | 1.8 | 5.5 | 11 | Yes/No | Yes |
U | Sepsis | 34 | Yes | 58 | 3.1 | 2.2 | 3.3 | 1.6 | 9 | No/No | No |
Of the 21 patients treated with IVIG, 9 did not receive a surgical consultation either because they responded to medical treatment promptly (6 patients), were too unstable for surgery (2 patients), or because the patient/family refused surgery (1 patient). Of the 12 patients who received surgical consultation, 2 underwent surgery. The remainder did not proceed to surgery for the following reasons: they were deemed medically unstable for surgery (6 patients), declined surgery (2 patients), were diagnosed with cancer on colonoscopy (1 patient), or improved with medical treatment (1 patient).
The severity of systemic involvement was measured using the APACHE II score on day 1 of IVIG infusion. The mean APACHE II score was 25. Eighteen patients were in a monitored unit when IVIG was administered. The study group had laboratory results in keeping with those previously used to define severe colitis:4, 9, 19 leukocytosis (defined as white blood cell count higher than 12,000 cells/mL [mean = 36,000 cells/mL]), hypoalbuminemia (mean = 1.78 g/dL, SD = 0.68 g/dL), hypokalemia (mean = 3.02 mg/dL, SD = 0.47 g/dL), and acute renal failure (defined as serum creatinine level >1.5 mg/dL [mean = 2.98 mg/dL, SD = 1.42 g/dL]).
IVIG Use
Table 3 describes the treatment patients received for CDC as well as the total number of antibiotics used throughout the hospital stay. IVIG was used as adjuvant treatment (defined as IVIG administration within 4 days or less after CDC diagnosis) in 8 patients and as second‐line treatment (defined as IVIG administration more than 4 days after CDC diagnosis) in 13 patients. Metronidazole, vancomycin, cholestyramine, and probiotic treatment alone or in different combinations were used for an average of 8 days (SD = 8 days; range, 025 days) before IVIG infusion. The total IVIG dose administered varied depending on the prescribing attending, with a range of 200 mg/kg to 1250 mg/kg and a mode of 250 mg/kg for 1 to 3 days. An average of 5 (SD = 2) different antibiotics that were not active against C. difficile were used per patient without being discontinued after a CDC diagnosis was made. The 3 most common were: cephalosporins (cefazolin, ceftriaxone, cefepime), fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin), and combination antibiotics (piperacillin and tazobactam or ampicillin and sulbactam).
Patient | Number of Antibiotics | Duration of Treatment Before IVIG (days) | Treatment Before IVIG (days) | Total CDC Treatment (days) | IgG Level | IVIG Dose |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
A | 5 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (7), Choles (2) | Oral and rectal Vanc (26,19), IV Metro (19), Choles (2), Lacto (6) | Low | 300 mg/kg for 1 day |
B | 1 | 13 | Metro (13), Vanc (13) | Oral Vanc (17) and IV Metro (12) | 300 mg/kg for 1 day | |
C | 3 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (3) | IV Metro (28),Vanc oral and enema (18,3), Lacto (10) | Low | 125 mg/kg for 5 days |
D | 5 | 25 | Metro (25), Vanc (15) | Oral then IV Metro (10,15), oral Vanc (25), Choles (7) and Lacto (13) | Low | 200 mg/kg for 1 day |
E | 1 | 4 | Metro (1), Vanc (4), Choles(4) | IV Metro (8), oral Vanc (10) and Choles (4) | 75 mg/kg for 5 days | |
F | 4 | 2 | Metro (2), Vanc (1) | IV Metro (8) and oral Vanc (9) | 250 mg/kg for 5 days | |
G | 3 | 17 | Metro (17), Vanc (14) | IV Metro (49) and oral Vanc (61) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
H | 5 | 1 | Metro (1), Vanc (1) | Oral Metro (18), oral Vanc (22 ), IV Metro (3) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
I | 6 | 1 | Metro (1) | Oral and IV Metro (7,9), Vanc oral and enema (8,3) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
J | 8 | 16 | Metro (14), Vanc (2), Lacto (6) | Oral then IV Metro (10,5), oral and rectal Vanc (3,1), Lacto (6) | 300 mg/ kg for 1 day | |
K | 6 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (3) | Oral then IV Metro (10) and oral Vanc (9) | Normal | 400 mg/kg for 2 days |
L | 4 | 0 | None | IV then oral Metro (7,10), oral Vanc (23), Choles (7), and Lacto (5) | 150 mg/kg for 5 days | |
M | 6 | 1 | Metro (1) | IV Metro (23) and oral Vanc (9) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
N | 7 | 1 | Metro (1), Vanc (1) | IV Metro (16), oral Vanc (14), oral Metro (7) | 250 mg /kg for 2 days | |
O | 6 | 7 | Metro (6), Vanc (4) | IV Metro (6) and oral Vanc (22) | Low | 250 mg/kg for 2 days |
P | 3 | 6 | Metro (6), Vanc (6) | IV Metro (25) and oral Vanc (17) | 150 mg/kg fro 3 days | |
Q | 3 | 4 | Metro (4), Vanc (3) | Oral Metro (8),Vanc oral and enema (6,3) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
R | 5 | 9 | Vanc (9) | Vanc oral and enema (5,4), IV Metro (2) | 250 mg/kg for 1 day | |
S | 8 | 23 | Metro (23), Vanc (23) | Oral then IV Metro (12,22), oral Vanc (39) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
T | 4 | 6 | Metro (6), Vanc (1) | Oral Vanc and IV Metro (11) | 250 mg/kg for 1 day | |
U | 4 | 2 | Metro (2), Vanc (2) | Oral Vanc and IV Metro (6) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days |
Survival with IVIG Use
Nine patients (43%) survived their illness and were discharged from the hospital. They experienced complete clinical resolution after an average of 10 days from IVIG administration (range, 220 days) (Table 4). The other 12 patients (57%) died during the index hospitalization. The average length of stay was 23 (range, 964) days.0
Patient | Disposition | Clearance of Clostridium difficile Colitis? | Days to Resolution |
---|---|---|---|
| |||
A | Alive | Loose BM persisted but diarrhea resolved 9 days after IVIG. | 9 |
B | Alive | BM became formed and diarrhea resolved 48 hours after IVIG. | 2 |
C | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 20 days post‐IVIG infusion. CAT scan: colonic thickening improved. | 20 |
D | Alive | Diarrhea resolved on discharge. Response to IVIG started next day after administration. | 18 |
E | Alive | Diarrhea improved next day after IVIG administration and resolved on discharge. | 5 |
F | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 5 days after IVIG administration. | 5 |
G | Alive | Diarrhea resolved. C. difficile test became negative. | 13 |
H | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 2 days before discharge. | 15 |
I | Alive | Diarrhea slowly improved and resolved 4 days before discharge. | 7 |
J | Deceased | ||
K | Deceased | ||
L | Deceased | ||
M | Deceased | ||
N | Deceased | ||
O | Deceased | ||
P | Deceased | ||
Q | Deceased | ||
R | Deceased | ||
S | Deceased | ||
T | Deceased | ||
U | Deceased |
Study | Number of Patients | Age (SD) (years) | Male | Female | Severity Definition | IVIG Dose | Days to Resolution | Days IVIG Infused | Alive? (%) | Recurrence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
Salcedo et al.22 | 2 | 63, 64 | 1 | 1 | Pancolitis or thumbprinting on CAT scan | 200300 mg/kg once | 12 | 59 | 100 | 1 out of 2 |
McPherson et al.21 | 8 | 72 (12) | ? | ? | Pancolitis | 200400 mg/kg twice | 226 | 1165 | 75 | 2 out of 6 |
Juang et al.25 | 18 | 67 (17.4) | 5 | 13 | Modified Rubin et al.9 criteria | 200300 mg/kg once | ? | ? | 83 | ? |
Hassoun et al.24 | 1 | 72 | 1 | 0 | Pancolitis | 400 mg/kg once | 6 | 15 | 100 | None |
Chandrasekar et al.23 | 1 | 67 | 0 | 1 | Shock requiring inotropic support and pseudomembranes on colonoscopy | 400 mg/kg for 5 doses | 16 | 35 | 100 | ? |
This paper | 21 | 68 (16) | 7 | 14 | Pancolitis and APACHE II score | 300 mg/kg once; 250 mg/kg for 5 doses | 220 | 025 | 43 | ? |
To further assess the impact of IVIG on colitis resolution, we investigated all variables in the data set that may have been associated with mortality using univariate Cox regression analysis. Those variables were as follows: APACHE II score on the first day of IVIG infusion, age, sex, previous history of CDC, number of days before IVIG use, peak white blood cell count, serum potassium level and creatinine level, lactate level on first day of IVIG infusion, and number of antibiotics administered that are not active against CDC. Only the APACHE II score (P = 0.006) and lactate level on the day of IVIG infusion (P = 0.004) were (positively) associated with CDC mortality. The positive association between CDC mortality and APACHE II score remained significant (P = 0.04) after adjusting for sex, previous history of CDC, number of days before IVIG use, lactate level on first day of IVIG infusion, and number of antibiotics administered that are not active against CDC using a multivariate Cox regression analysis model. No adjustments were made for age, white blood cell count, potassium level, or creatinine level as those are included within the APACHE II score. The positive association between lactate level on the first day of IVIG infusion and CDC mortality was not statistically significant after adjusting for the factors listed above in the same model (P = 0.13).
Discussion
To our knowledge, the present study is the largest series published in the literature to date on the use of IVIG for severe CDC. It is also the first study to report a high mortality rate compared to the 5 previous smaller studies on this topic. In the first report on IVIG use for CDC, Leung et al.15 used IVIG to treat 5 pediatric patients suffering from chronic relapsing CDC. It was not until 7 years later, in 1997, that the first IVIG use for severe CDC was reported.22 Since then, a total of 13 works have been published on IVIG for CDC treatment, and only in 5 of these was IVIG administered for severe CDC treatment:2125 3 case reports, 1 case series, and 1 case‐control study. Although the 4 uncontrolled reports concluded that IVIG is beneficial for severe CDC, the only controlled study reported no significant difference between cases and controls for all‐cause mortality, length of stay, and colectomy rate.25
The definition of severe CDC varied between reports, making comparison difficult. McPherson et al.21 and Hassoun and Ibrahim24 defined severe disease as one causing pancolitis on CT scan either with or without megacolon. In the study by Juang et al.,25 disease severity was assessed using the modified criteria of Rubin et al.9 Salcedo et al.22 defined severe CDC as one causing pancolitis in one patient and thumbprinting on CT scan in another, whereas Chandrasekar et al.23 defined it as one causing shock requiring inotropic support and presence of pseudomembranes on colonoscopy.
The present report is unique in that it provided 2 scales to characterize disease in each patient. The first scale measured colonic involvement anatomically and physiologically using a combination of computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan findings, presence or absence of ileus or referral for possible colectomy. This is not a prognostic scale, however, since CAT scan findings have been previously shown to be poor predictors of treatment outcome.29 The second scale measured the severity of systemic involvement using a well‐validated and standardized scale, the APACHE II score. We have shown in this report that it is associated with prognosis in the context of IVIG use.
Our study reports a higher mortality rate than previously described, and suggests that risk stratification and patient selection are important before IVIG administration, since not all patients seem to benefit from this treatment as previously suggested by smaller case series. Previously, several physical findings and laboratory values were found to be associated with worse outcome in CDC. These were increasing age, immunosuppression, shock requiring vasopressors, peak white blood cell count, peak serum lactate level, hypoalbuminemia, a fall in serum albumin level of >1.1 g/dL at the onset of CDC symptoms, use of 3 or more antibiotics, comorbid disease, previous history of CDC, acute renal failure and hypotension, underlying altered or depressed mental status, abdominal pain or distention, white blood cell count over 20,000/mm3 or <1500/mm3 and/or a >10% band forms on the white blood cell differential count, and ascites or pneumatosis coli by abdominal imaging.9, 3033 Using the APACHE II scale for the same purpose has the advantage of utilizing a well‐validated and objective scale that is expected to measure the degree of systemic involvement more reliably compared to the clinical and laboratory values above.
Timing of IVIG infusion remains controversial. Due to the lack of randomized controlled trials, the current practice is guided by expert opinion, leading to wide variations between reports. Since the APACHE II score was positively associated with mortality in the setting of IVIG treatment, the same scale could be used to guide decisions regarding timing of IVIG infusion. Our results suggest that IVIG should be preferentially used while the APACHE II score is still relatively low. This association and the specific APACHE II score at which to initiate or hold treatment need to be validated in the setting of a randomized controlled study before being used in clinical practice.
Although the current study was not designed to test this theory, IVIG could be associated conceptually with treatment success for patients with severe disease that is still restricted to the colon (without other organ dysfunction or at least at an early stage of extracolonic organ failure and thus associated with a low APACHE II score) but not for severe colonic disease with secondary multiple organ failure (high APACHE II score). This may be because colonic disease is toxin‐mediated whereas secondary systemic involvement is mediated through toxin‐induced inflammatory mediators (interleukin‐8, macrophage‐inflammatory protein‐2, substance P, tumor necrosis factor‐alpha) released locally in the colon,3436 triggering a SIRS and hematogenous translocation of colonic bacteria,37 both of which are poorly responsive to immunoglobulin infusion. Along the same lines, waiting for failure of conventional therapy before IVIG use might result in IVIG treatment failure because of disease progression and secondary sepsis, at which point no treatment may be effective. No study thus far has addressed this issue specifically.
Overall, the combined cohort of patients with severe CDC treated with IVIG in the literature includes 51 patients (Table 4). The current report contributes 41% of these patients. The patients' average age was 68 years, with a 2 to 1 female‐male ratio. The dose of IVIG used varied largely also, with 400 mg/kg being the mode (range, 75400 mg/kg from 1 to 5 doses). This dose is significantly below the doses used in the treatment of other diseases, like Guillain‐Barr syndrome, myasthenia gravis, Kawasaki disease, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, agammaglobulinemia, and hypogammaglobulinemia, where the usual dose is 400 mg/kg for 5 days. The resolution of diarrhea in these cases occurred after an average of 9 (range, 142) days. The index hospitalization survival rate varied from 43% to 100%. Patients received standard treatment for an average of 13 (range, 065) days before IVIG infusion. Thirty‐two of 51 patients survived their illness (63%). Neither total IgG nor anti‐toxin A IgG levels were measured in any of the reports. Of the 32 patients who had clinical resolution, 3 (10%) experienced symptoms recurrence in a follow‐up period of 1 to 13 months. This number is most probably an underestimation of the true recurrence rate resulting from an incomplete reporting because there was no uniform or active recurrence ascertainment mechanism in any of the studies. The recurrences were at 10, 14, and 30 days posttreatment. Since standard treatment was not discontinued in any of the reports once IVIG was given, the relative contribution and the ideal timing for IVIG infusion are still unclear.
The mechanism of action of IVIG is passive immunization (with anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies present in the pooled immunoglobulin) of a host who is usually unable to mount an adequate protective immune response.15, 22 IVIG is formed from pooling immunoglobulin from several random donors. It has been shown that many such donors express high anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibody serum titers.38, 39 In addition, high levels of anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies were present in the IVIG preparations and the recipients after infusion.1517, 22 Although constituting only a small fraction of the total IVIG administered, these antitoxin antibodies are believed to neutralize toxin A and B and help the host recover from the disease. In fact, Babcock et al.40 used an experimental hamster model of CDC to demonstrate a mortality reduction from 100% to 55% postinfusion of combined anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies. While some early reports indicated that anti‐toxin B antibodies were the major determinants of protection against colitis,41 later reports correlated disease severity pathologically42 and clinically43, 44 with anti‐toxin A levels. Anti‐toxin B antibodies were later shown to play an adjunctive role in conferring immunity against CDC40, 45, 46 when added to anti‐toxin A antibodies, but not to have any significant role on their own.
However, IVIG has been shown to contain IgG, but not IgA, anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies while it is only the IgA class of anti‐toxin A antibodies, and not the IgG class, that could neutralize toxin A in vitro and in vivo.47, 48 Babcock et al.40 solved this apparent dilemma by showing that a combination of 3 different monoclonal IgG anti‐toxin A antibodies could neutralize toxin A activity in vitro and prevent disease in the hamster model in vivo. Each of the 3 antibodies recognized a different toxin A domain: the first neutralized toxin A enzymatic activity, while the second prevented toxin A binding to its receptor on enterocytes, and the third prevented toxin internalization after binding to the receptor.
Thus, the mechanism of action of IVIG is most likely through the transfer of IgG anti‐toxin A antibodies that gain access to the intestinal lumen presumably secondary to inflammation‐induced mucosal damage and neutralize toxin A. Transfer of yet undetected IgA anti‐toxin A antibodies that prevent toxin A from binding to its receptor is much less likely, although possible.
The present study has limitations. As in all retrospective studies, selection bias was unavoidable. In addition, the decision to initiate IVIG administration was dependent on the attending physician, who also decided the dose, leading to heterogeneity in the total dose of IVIG infused. Such heterogeneity, however, is primarily the result of a lack of a standard dose for IVIG infusion for CDC in the published literature, as reported above. In addition, since IVIG is not yet approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of severe CDC, standard treatment was not discontinued in any of the reports to date, including ours.
Choosing appropriate controls for patients suffering from severe CDC is challenging. This patient population is usually frail, with severe and multiple underlying diseases. The deteriorating clinical condition (and subsequently the need for multiple antibiotics) may be either the result of or the cause of CDC. Furthermore, IVIG has been in short supply for several years and therefore it has been expensive, making its administration to the number of patients needed to design adequately‐powered controlled studies difficult. These are mainly the reasons no randomized, multicenter, placebo‐controlled trial on IVIG use in severe CDC has been conducted to date.
Conclusions
In the present study, we report the results of IVIG use for the treatment of 21 patients with severe CDC. This is the largest cohort to our knowledge in the literature. Unlike previous studies on the subject, the present report provided 2 scales for disease assessment: the first based on the extent of colonic involvement and the second measuring the severity of systemic involvement using the APACHE II score. The latter was positively associated with mortality in this context. Of the 21 study patients treated with IVIG, only 9 patients (43%) survived their illness. This is the highest reported mortality rate among all studies on this subject so far. Further studies on the ideal timing of IVIG infusion, dose, and patient selection are needed before accepting IVIG as a standard of care for severe CDC treatment. The role of APACHE II score in the decision to use IVIG is promising and should be validated in randomized controlled trials.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Indrani Mukherjee, MD, for her help and expertise in proofreading the manuscript.
Clostridium difficile colitis (CDC) is the most common cause of hospital‐acquired diarrhea.1 The incidence of CDC has sharply increased over the past decade despite increasing awareness among health care professionals.24 C. difficile pathogenic strains induce diarrhea through the elaboration and secretion of 2 exotoxins: toxin A and toxin B. Toxin A is an inflammatory toxin, leading to fluid secretion, increased mucosal permeability, and marked enteritis and colitis.5 Toxin B is cytotoxic, leading to cell injury and apoptosis.5 Combined, toxin A and toxin B can cause a wide spectrum of clinical presentations, ranging from mild diarrhea that resolves with the discontinuation of antibiotics to a fulminant colitis requiring surgical intervention.
The severity of clinical manifestations has been shown to be inversely proportional to the host anti‐toxin A antibody level in response to toxin exposure. Kyne et al.6 demonstrated that asymptomatic C. difficile carriers produced significantly higher anti‐toxin A immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels compared to symptomatic patients. Among the latter group, patients with mild disease had a higher antibody level compared to those with severe colitis.6, 7 Additional risk factors predisposing to severe colitis are advanced age, severe underlying illness,8 and immunocompromised state.9
Recently, a new C. difficile strain (BI/NAP1) with a mutated toxin A and toxin B promoter silencer, a binary toxin gene, and fluoroquinolone resistance has been described in Canada and the United States.3, 10 This strain has been associated with an increased incidence of CDC among hospitalized patients, especially the incidence of severe disease requiring colectomy. At the same time, several reports describing metronidazole treatment failure have been published.1114 These recent findings emphasize the importance of finding alternative treatments for CDC.
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) was used to treat CDC for the first time in 1991.15 Since then, 12 case reports and small case series, along with 1 case‐control study have been published documenting IVIG treatment outcomes.1527 However, only 5 reports to date examined patients with severe CDC.2125 In the present study, we report the largest series of patients with severe CDC treated with IVIG in the literature to our knowledge.
Patients and Methods
Case Series
We used CareScience software (CareScience, Inc., Philadelphia, PA) to retrospectively identify all patients admitted to our institution with a primary or secondary diagnosis of CDC (code 00845) between July 1, 2002 and May 1, 2006. CareScience is commercially available software that tracks all admissions to our institution and allows the performance of patient searches with a wide spectrum of user‐defined search criteria. Using the same software, we further identified those patients who received IVIG during their hospital stay. We then obtained the hospital chart for each patient, from the medical records department and established the study database.
A case was defined as a patient with diarrhea (at least 3 loose stools daily) for at least 2 days who had C. difficile cytotoxin‐positive feces and at least 1 of the following criteria: clinical symptoms (abdominal pain and/or distension and fever); leukemoid reaction (defined as white blood cell count of 20,000 cells/mm3 or above. This cutoff value was chosen as it has been used previously as a prognostic factor)4; radiographic evidence of colitis by computed tomography (CT) of the abdomen; and/or the presence of pseudomembranes on flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy. We excluded all patients who received IVIG for an indication other than CDC treatment (n = 3). There were no other exclusion criteria.
We used a standardized data collection tool and recorded demographics (age, gender, principal diagnosis), past medical and surgical history, other risk factors for C. difficile infection (previous CDC, antibiotics received during hospital stay, immunosuppressive medications or organ transplantation within the previous 6 weeks, history of malignancy or diabetes mellitus); clinical presentation (abdominal distention, abdominal pain, diarrhea, fever, leukemoid reaction, and hypotension defined as systolic blood pressure <85 mm Hg despite at least 1 L of intravenous normal saline administration and the need for vasopressor use); colonoscopy findings; CT scan and x‐ray findings; laboratory values; date and dose of IVIG infused and other C. difficile pharmacological treatments; and Acute Physiological Assessment and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score28 at the first day of IVIG infusion. The primary outcomes were survival at the end of the hospital stay and clinical disease resolution, defined as 2 formed bowel movements or less per day without abdominal pain or distention.
The decision to initiate IVIG therapy and the dose to be used was made by the individual attending physician.
Statistical Analysis
Single (univariate) and multiple (multivariate) logistic regression analysis were applied to identify variables among the ones collected that are independent predictors of CDC mortality. All statistical analyses were completed with the STATA 10 software package (StatCorp LP, College Station, TX).
Review of the Literature
We used PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and Excerpta Medica databases to search for any publication in a peer‐reviewed journal on the use of IVIG for the treatment of severe CDC. We used the search words: IVIG or intravenous immunoglobulin and clostridium difficile. Only publications published in English were selected. The date range used was January 1, 1950 to January 7, 2009. We were able to find 5 publications using this search criteria.
Results
Study Population
Of the 1230 patients diagnosed with CDC over the 4‐year study period, 21 patients were treated with IVIG. Table 1 summarizes the patients' characteristics. There were 13 women and 8 men. The mean age was 68 years, with a standard deviation (SD) of 13 years. Sepsis was the primary diagnosis in all patients. Sixteen patients had predisposing risk factors for CDC, including immunosuppression (immunosuppressive medication [n = 2], human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] infection [n = 2]); cancer (n = 3); recent surgery (n = 3); and diabetes mellitus (n = 11). Nine patients had documented previous CDC episodes. The indications for IVIG administration were evidence of pancolitis on abdominal CT scan (n = 12) or severe ileus with cessation of diarrhea, abdominal distention, and requirement for total parenteral nutrition (n = 5), or severe hypotension (n = 4) (defined as systolic blood pressure <85 mm Hg despite at least 1 L of intravenous normal saline administration and the subsequent need for vasopressor use).
Patient | Age (gender) | Diagnosis | Medical and Surgical History | CDC History | Colonoscopy Findings | Radiographic Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
A | 40 (female) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Gastric stapling | Yes | * | Diffuse colitis |
B | 86 (female) | Fulminant CDC | Metastatic ovarian carcinoma | PC | No colonic thickening | |
C | 72 (male) | Sepsis | Acute pancreatitis with sec. pseudocyst, DM | Yes | PC | Diffuse colitis |
D | 78 (male) | Discitis | Delayed: normal mucosa | Dilation of small and large bowel | ||
E | 98 (female) | Urosepsis | Yes | * | No bowel distention | |
F | 90 (female) | Right lower extremity cellulitis | DM | * | Concentric thickening of rectal wall | |
G | 64 (male) | Ischemic colitis | DM, recent Hartman pouch closure | Marked inflammation | Diffuse colitis | |
H | 78 (female) | Toe osteomyelitis and CDC with sec. sepsis | DM | * | Diffuse colitis | |
I | 35 (female) | Sepsis | Yes | * | Diffuse nonspecific colitis, minimal ascites | |
J | 47 (female) | Pneumonia and sec. sepsis | * | Diffuse colitis | ||
K | 56 (female) | Urosepsis | HIV | Yes | * | Colitis involving the right colon |
L | 76 (male) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Sigmoid bladder fistula repair, DM | * | Diffuse colitis | |
M | 71 (female) | Pneumonia with sec. sepsis | * | Diffuse colitis | ||
N | 63 (male) | Urosepsis | DM, lymphoma resection from small intestine | PC | Marked small and large bowel distention | |
O | 86 (male) | Enterococcus‐induced sepsis | Rheumatoid arthritis on methotrexate | * | Fat stranding suggesting peritonitis | |
P | 60 (female) | Gastrointestinal bleed and CDC | DM with neuropathy and retinopathies | Yes | * | Thickening of wall of colon in most of the colon |
Q | 57 (female) | Sepsis | DM | Yes | * | Normal |
R | 67 (female) | CDC with sec. sepsis | Candidal esophagitis | Yes | * | Large amount of peritoneal fluid, mild small bowel thickening |
S | 60 (female) | Sepsis sec. to S. aureus and P. aerogenosa | DM, renal transplant (myco, prednisone) | * | Ileus with air fluid level in the small intestine | |
T | 80 (female) | Sepsis | DM | Yes | * | Thickening of descending colon consistent with colitis |
U | 72 (male) | CDC, widespread metastatic cancer | DM, metastatic cancer (unknown primary site) | * | Severe colitis up to the splenic flexure |
Table 2 describes disease severity in these patients. Since CDC starts locally in the colon then secondarily involves multiple organs as part of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), 2 scales were used to characterize the disease in each patient: (1) extent of local colonic inflammation, and (2) severity of systemic involvement. Extensive colonic involvement was evidenced in all patients by pancolitis on abdominal imaging modalities (12 patients), severe ileus requiring total parenteral nutrition (13 patients), or referral for surgical consultation for possible colectomy (12 patients).
Patient | Complications During the Hospital Stay | APACHE II Score | Monitored Unit | WBC* | K | Alb | Lactate | Cr | Hospital Stay (days) | Surgical Consult/Surgery | TPN for Colitis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||||||
A | Sepsis, DIC, ARDS, intubation | 15 | Yes | 48 | 4 | 1.1 | 2.9 | 1.3 | 26 | No/No | Yes |
B | Dehydration, weakness | 12 | No | 19 | 3.4 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 16 | No/No | Yes | |
C | HTP, GI bleed, ischemic colitis, F | 22 | Yes | 21 | 2.7 | 2.5 | 1.3 | ESRD | 34 | Yes/No | Yes |
D | AD, megacolon, HT, intubation, ARF | 18 | Yes | 25 | 3.4 | 1.4 | 1.1 | 2.6 | 52 | Yes/No | Yes |
E | Exacerbation of CHF with respiratory distress, Bipap support, confusion | 21 | No | 10 | 2.6 | 2.3 | 1 | 11 | No/No | No | |
F | Confusion, gout acute attack | 21 | No | 33 | 3.1 | 2.6 | ESRD | 15 | No/No | No | |
G | Intubation, cardiac arrest, AF with RVR, PNA, ARF, DVT, dysphagia, PEG | 6 | Yes | 15 | 3.1 | 1.7 | 1.9 | 2.2 | 32 | Yes/No | Yes |
H | Sepsis, intubation, ARF, PEG, toe amputation, PNA, pulmonary edema, TPN, vitamin D deficiency | 34 | Yes | 59 | 2.8 | 1.5 | 4 | 3.8 | 17 | No/No | Yes |
I | CHF, transient third cranial nerve palsy, DIC | 20 | Yes | 52 | 3.2 | 3.3 | 0.7 | ESRD | 11 | No/No | No |
J | Aspiration PNA, sepsis, DIC, intubation, MI, F, HT | 32 | Yes | 17 | 2.7 | 1.8 | 14 | ESRD | 21 | Yes/no | No |
K | Intubation, cardiac arrest, ARF, DIC, AP, F | 30 | Yes | 25 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 13 | 3.6 | 10 | Yes/no | No |
L | Intubation, ARF, HTP, MI, AD, F | 23 | Yes | 69 | 3.2 | 1.8 | 1.4 | 3.6 | 23 | Yes/no | No |
M | Intubation, DIC, ARF, GI bleeding, hypothermia, AD | 23 | Yes | 47 | 2.8 | 1.4 | 1.4 | 4.3 | 23 | Yes/no | Yes |
N | Intubation, HTP, AD, F, ARF with HD, AF, osteomyelitis | 23 | Yes | 46 | 2.9 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 2.7 | 27 | Yes/no | Yes |
O | Intubation, ARF, 2 cardiac arrests, GI bleed, UTI, rhabdomyolysis, liver shock, AF | 31 | Yes | 49 | 2.5 | 1.1 | 2.3 | 2.9 | 25 | Yes/no | Yes |
P | Bowel ischemia with bowel resection, ARF, MI, ischemic bowel, fluid overload, respiratory failure | 23 | Yes | 26 | 2.6 | 0.8 | 2.9 | 3.1 | 9 | Yes/Yes | Yes |
Q | Pulmonary embolism | 39 | Yes | 23 | 2.8 | 1.1 | 8.1 | ESRD | 9 | No/No | Yes |
R | Fungal peritonitis, aspiration pneumonia, cardiac arrest | 26 | Yes | 30 | 4.1 | 1.1 | 0.9 | ESRD | 36 | No/No | Yes |
S | Intubation, pneumothorax, CRT, pressor‐dependent shock, ARF | 36 | Yes | 46 | 3.1 | 1.8 | 2.1 | 5.4 | 64 | Yes/Yes | No |
T | Pressor‐dependent sepsis, pulmonary edema, ARF with HD | 36 | Yes | 35 | 3.3 | 1.3 | 1.8 | 5.5 | 11 | Yes/No | Yes |
U | Sepsis | 34 | Yes | 58 | 3.1 | 2.2 | 3.3 | 1.6 | 9 | No/No | No |
Of the 21 patients treated with IVIG, 9 did not receive a surgical consultation either because they responded to medical treatment promptly (6 patients), were too unstable for surgery (2 patients), or because the patient/family refused surgery (1 patient). Of the 12 patients who received surgical consultation, 2 underwent surgery. The remainder did not proceed to surgery for the following reasons: they were deemed medically unstable for surgery (6 patients), declined surgery (2 patients), were diagnosed with cancer on colonoscopy (1 patient), or improved with medical treatment (1 patient).
The severity of systemic involvement was measured using the APACHE II score on day 1 of IVIG infusion. The mean APACHE II score was 25. Eighteen patients were in a monitored unit when IVIG was administered. The study group had laboratory results in keeping with those previously used to define severe colitis:4, 9, 19 leukocytosis (defined as white blood cell count higher than 12,000 cells/mL [mean = 36,000 cells/mL]), hypoalbuminemia (mean = 1.78 g/dL, SD = 0.68 g/dL), hypokalemia (mean = 3.02 mg/dL, SD = 0.47 g/dL), and acute renal failure (defined as serum creatinine level >1.5 mg/dL [mean = 2.98 mg/dL, SD = 1.42 g/dL]).
IVIG Use
Table 3 describes the treatment patients received for CDC as well as the total number of antibiotics used throughout the hospital stay. IVIG was used as adjuvant treatment (defined as IVIG administration within 4 days or less after CDC diagnosis) in 8 patients and as second‐line treatment (defined as IVIG administration more than 4 days after CDC diagnosis) in 13 patients. Metronidazole, vancomycin, cholestyramine, and probiotic treatment alone or in different combinations were used for an average of 8 days (SD = 8 days; range, 025 days) before IVIG infusion. The total IVIG dose administered varied depending on the prescribing attending, with a range of 200 mg/kg to 1250 mg/kg and a mode of 250 mg/kg for 1 to 3 days. An average of 5 (SD = 2) different antibiotics that were not active against C. difficile were used per patient without being discontinued after a CDC diagnosis was made. The 3 most common were: cephalosporins (cefazolin, ceftriaxone, cefepime), fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin), and combination antibiotics (piperacillin and tazobactam or ampicillin and sulbactam).
Patient | Number of Antibiotics | Duration of Treatment Before IVIG (days) | Treatment Before IVIG (days) | Total CDC Treatment (days) | IgG Level | IVIG Dose |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
A | 5 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (7), Choles (2) | Oral and rectal Vanc (26,19), IV Metro (19), Choles (2), Lacto (6) | Low | 300 mg/kg for 1 day |
B | 1 | 13 | Metro (13), Vanc (13) | Oral Vanc (17) and IV Metro (12) | 300 mg/kg for 1 day | |
C | 3 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (3) | IV Metro (28),Vanc oral and enema (18,3), Lacto (10) | Low | 125 mg/kg for 5 days |
D | 5 | 25 | Metro (25), Vanc (15) | Oral then IV Metro (10,15), oral Vanc (25), Choles (7) and Lacto (13) | Low | 200 mg/kg for 1 day |
E | 1 | 4 | Metro (1), Vanc (4), Choles(4) | IV Metro (8), oral Vanc (10) and Choles (4) | 75 mg/kg for 5 days | |
F | 4 | 2 | Metro (2), Vanc (1) | IV Metro (8) and oral Vanc (9) | 250 mg/kg for 5 days | |
G | 3 | 17 | Metro (17), Vanc (14) | IV Metro (49) and oral Vanc (61) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
H | 5 | 1 | Metro (1), Vanc (1) | Oral Metro (18), oral Vanc (22 ), IV Metro (3) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
I | 6 | 1 | Metro (1) | Oral and IV Metro (7,9), Vanc oral and enema (8,3) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
J | 8 | 16 | Metro (14), Vanc (2), Lacto (6) | Oral then IV Metro (10,5), oral and rectal Vanc (3,1), Lacto (6) | 300 mg/ kg for 1 day | |
K | 6 | 7 | Metro (7), Vanc (3) | Oral then IV Metro (10) and oral Vanc (9) | Normal | 400 mg/kg for 2 days |
L | 4 | 0 | None | IV then oral Metro (7,10), oral Vanc (23), Choles (7), and Lacto (5) | 150 mg/kg for 5 days | |
M | 6 | 1 | Metro (1) | IV Metro (23) and oral Vanc (9) | 250 mg/kg for 2 days | |
N | 7 | 1 | Metro (1), Vanc (1) | IV Metro (16), oral Vanc (14), oral Metro (7) | 250 mg /kg for 2 days | |
O | 6 | 7 | Metro (6), Vanc (4) | IV Metro (6) and oral Vanc (22) | Low | 250 mg/kg for 2 days |
P | 3 | 6 | Metro (6), Vanc (6) | IV Metro (25) and oral Vanc (17) | 150 mg/kg fro 3 days | |
Q | 3 | 4 | Metro (4), Vanc (3) | Oral Metro (8),Vanc oral and enema (6,3) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
R | 5 | 9 | Vanc (9) | Vanc oral and enema (5,4), IV Metro (2) | 250 mg/kg for 1 day | |
S | 8 | 23 | Metro (23), Vanc (23) | Oral then IV Metro (12,22), oral Vanc (39) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days | |
T | 4 | 6 | Metro (6), Vanc (1) | Oral Vanc and IV Metro (11) | 250 mg/kg for 1 day | |
U | 4 | 2 | Metro (2), Vanc (2) | Oral Vanc and IV Metro (6) | 250 mg/kg for 3 days |
Survival with IVIG Use
Nine patients (43%) survived their illness and were discharged from the hospital. They experienced complete clinical resolution after an average of 10 days from IVIG administration (range, 220 days) (Table 4). The other 12 patients (57%) died during the index hospitalization. The average length of stay was 23 (range, 964) days.0
Patient | Disposition | Clearance of Clostridium difficile Colitis? | Days to Resolution |
---|---|---|---|
| |||
A | Alive | Loose BM persisted but diarrhea resolved 9 days after IVIG. | 9 |
B | Alive | BM became formed and diarrhea resolved 48 hours after IVIG. | 2 |
C | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 20 days post‐IVIG infusion. CAT scan: colonic thickening improved. | 20 |
D | Alive | Diarrhea resolved on discharge. Response to IVIG started next day after administration. | 18 |
E | Alive | Diarrhea improved next day after IVIG administration and resolved on discharge. | 5 |
F | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 5 days after IVIG administration. | 5 |
G | Alive | Diarrhea resolved. C. difficile test became negative. | 13 |
H | Alive | Diarrhea resolved 2 days before discharge. | 15 |
I | Alive | Diarrhea slowly improved and resolved 4 days before discharge. | 7 |
J | Deceased | ||
K | Deceased | ||
L | Deceased | ||
M | Deceased | ||
N | Deceased | ||
O | Deceased | ||
P | Deceased | ||
Q | Deceased | ||
R | Deceased | ||
S | Deceased | ||
T | Deceased | ||
U | Deceased |
Study | Number of Patients | Age (SD) (years) | Male | Female | Severity Definition | IVIG Dose | Days to Resolution | Days IVIG Infused | Alive? (%) | Recurrence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||
Salcedo et al.22 | 2 | 63, 64 | 1 | 1 | Pancolitis or thumbprinting on CAT scan | 200300 mg/kg once | 12 | 59 | 100 | 1 out of 2 |
McPherson et al.21 | 8 | 72 (12) | ? | ? | Pancolitis | 200400 mg/kg twice | 226 | 1165 | 75 | 2 out of 6 |
Juang et al.25 | 18 | 67 (17.4) | 5 | 13 | Modified Rubin et al.9 criteria | 200300 mg/kg once | ? | ? | 83 | ? |
Hassoun et al.24 | 1 | 72 | 1 | 0 | Pancolitis | 400 mg/kg once | 6 | 15 | 100 | None |
Chandrasekar et al.23 | 1 | 67 | 0 | 1 | Shock requiring inotropic support and pseudomembranes on colonoscopy | 400 mg/kg for 5 doses | 16 | 35 | 100 | ? |
This paper | 21 | 68 (16) | 7 | 14 | Pancolitis and APACHE II score | 300 mg/kg once; 250 mg/kg for 5 doses | 220 | 025 | 43 | ? |
To further assess the impact of IVIG on colitis resolution, we investigated all variables in the data set that may have been associated with mortality using univariate Cox regression analysis. Those variables were as follows: APACHE II score on the first day of IVIG infusion, age, sex, previous history of CDC, number of days before IVIG use, peak white blood cell count, serum potassium level and creatinine level, lactate level on first day of IVIG infusion, and number of antibiotics administered that are not active against CDC. Only the APACHE II score (P = 0.006) and lactate level on the day of IVIG infusion (P = 0.004) were (positively) associated with CDC mortality. The positive association between CDC mortality and APACHE II score remained significant (P = 0.04) after adjusting for sex, previous history of CDC, number of days before IVIG use, lactate level on first day of IVIG infusion, and number of antibiotics administered that are not active against CDC using a multivariate Cox regression analysis model. No adjustments were made for age, white blood cell count, potassium level, or creatinine level as those are included within the APACHE II score. The positive association between lactate level on the first day of IVIG infusion and CDC mortality was not statistically significant after adjusting for the factors listed above in the same model (P = 0.13).
Discussion
To our knowledge, the present study is the largest series published in the literature to date on the use of IVIG for severe CDC. It is also the first study to report a high mortality rate compared to the 5 previous smaller studies on this topic. In the first report on IVIG use for CDC, Leung et al.15 used IVIG to treat 5 pediatric patients suffering from chronic relapsing CDC. It was not until 7 years later, in 1997, that the first IVIG use for severe CDC was reported.22 Since then, a total of 13 works have been published on IVIG for CDC treatment, and only in 5 of these was IVIG administered for severe CDC treatment:2125 3 case reports, 1 case series, and 1 case‐control study. Although the 4 uncontrolled reports concluded that IVIG is beneficial for severe CDC, the only controlled study reported no significant difference between cases and controls for all‐cause mortality, length of stay, and colectomy rate.25
The definition of severe CDC varied between reports, making comparison difficult. McPherson et al.21 and Hassoun and Ibrahim24 defined severe disease as one causing pancolitis on CT scan either with or without megacolon. In the study by Juang et al.,25 disease severity was assessed using the modified criteria of Rubin et al.9 Salcedo et al.22 defined severe CDC as one causing pancolitis in one patient and thumbprinting on CT scan in another, whereas Chandrasekar et al.23 defined it as one causing shock requiring inotropic support and presence of pseudomembranes on colonoscopy.
The present report is unique in that it provided 2 scales to characterize disease in each patient. The first scale measured colonic involvement anatomically and physiologically using a combination of computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan findings, presence or absence of ileus or referral for possible colectomy. This is not a prognostic scale, however, since CAT scan findings have been previously shown to be poor predictors of treatment outcome.29 The second scale measured the severity of systemic involvement using a well‐validated and standardized scale, the APACHE II score. We have shown in this report that it is associated with prognosis in the context of IVIG use.
Our study reports a higher mortality rate than previously described, and suggests that risk stratification and patient selection are important before IVIG administration, since not all patients seem to benefit from this treatment as previously suggested by smaller case series. Previously, several physical findings and laboratory values were found to be associated with worse outcome in CDC. These were increasing age, immunosuppression, shock requiring vasopressors, peak white blood cell count, peak serum lactate level, hypoalbuminemia, a fall in serum albumin level of >1.1 g/dL at the onset of CDC symptoms, use of 3 or more antibiotics, comorbid disease, previous history of CDC, acute renal failure and hypotension, underlying altered or depressed mental status, abdominal pain or distention, white blood cell count over 20,000/mm3 or <1500/mm3 and/or a >10% band forms on the white blood cell differential count, and ascites or pneumatosis coli by abdominal imaging.9, 3033 Using the APACHE II scale for the same purpose has the advantage of utilizing a well‐validated and objective scale that is expected to measure the degree of systemic involvement more reliably compared to the clinical and laboratory values above.
Timing of IVIG infusion remains controversial. Due to the lack of randomized controlled trials, the current practice is guided by expert opinion, leading to wide variations between reports. Since the APACHE II score was positively associated with mortality in the setting of IVIG treatment, the same scale could be used to guide decisions regarding timing of IVIG infusion. Our results suggest that IVIG should be preferentially used while the APACHE II score is still relatively low. This association and the specific APACHE II score at which to initiate or hold treatment need to be validated in the setting of a randomized controlled study before being used in clinical practice.
Although the current study was not designed to test this theory, IVIG could be associated conceptually with treatment success for patients with severe disease that is still restricted to the colon (without other organ dysfunction or at least at an early stage of extracolonic organ failure and thus associated with a low APACHE II score) but not for severe colonic disease with secondary multiple organ failure (high APACHE II score). This may be because colonic disease is toxin‐mediated whereas secondary systemic involvement is mediated through toxin‐induced inflammatory mediators (interleukin‐8, macrophage‐inflammatory protein‐2, substance P, tumor necrosis factor‐alpha) released locally in the colon,3436 triggering a SIRS and hematogenous translocation of colonic bacteria,37 both of which are poorly responsive to immunoglobulin infusion. Along the same lines, waiting for failure of conventional therapy before IVIG use might result in IVIG treatment failure because of disease progression and secondary sepsis, at which point no treatment may be effective. No study thus far has addressed this issue specifically.
Overall, the combined cohort of patients with severe CDC treated with IVIG in the literature includes 51 patients (Table 4). The current report contributes 41% of these patients. The patients' average age was 68 years, with a 2 to 1 female‐male ratio. The dose of IVIG used varied largely also, with 400 mg/kg being the mode (range, 75400 mg/kg from 1 to 5 doses). This dose is significantly below the doses used in the treatment of other diseases, like Guillain‐Barr syndrome, myasthenia gravis, Kawasaki disease, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, agammaglobulinemia, and hypogammaglobulinemia, where the usual dose is 400 mg/kg for 5 days. The resolution of diarrhea in these cases occurred after an average of 9 (range, 142) days. The index hospitalization survival rate varied from 43% to 100%. Patients received standard treatment for an average of 13 (range, 065) days before IVIG infusion. Thirty‐two of 51 patients survived their illness (63%). Neither total IgG nor anti‐toxin A IgG levels were measured in any of the reports. Of the 32 patients who had clinical resolution, 3 (10%) experienced symptoms recurrence in a follow‐up period of 1 to 13 months. This number is most probably an underestimation of the true recurrence rate resulting from an incomplete reporting because there was no uniform or active recurrence ascertainment mechanism in any of the studies. The recurrences were at 10, 14, and 30 days posttreatment. Since standard treatment was not discontinued in any of the reports once IVIG was given, the relative contribution and the ideal timing for IVIG infusion are still unclear.
The mechanism of action of IVIG is passive immunization (with anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies present in the pooled immunoglobulin) of a host who is usually unable to mount an adequate protective immune response.15, 22 IVIG is formed from pooling immunoglobulin from several random donors. It has been shown that many such donors express high anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibody serum titers.38, 39 In addition, high levels of anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies were present in the IVIG preparations and the recipients after infusion.1517, 22 Although constituting only a small fraction of the total IVIG administered, these antitoxin antibodies are believed to neutralize toxin A and B and help the host recover from the disease. In fact, Babcock et al.40 used an experimental hamster model of CDC to demonstrate a mortality reduction from 100% to 55% postinfusion of combined anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies. While some early reports indicated that anti‐toxin B antibodies were the major determinants of protection against colitis,41 later reports correlated disease severity pathologically42 and clinically43, 44 with anti‐toxin A levels. Anti‐toxin B antibodies were later shown to play an adjunctive role in conferring immunity against CDC40, 45, 46 when added to anti‐toxin A antibodies, but not to have any significant role on their own.
However, IVIG has been shown to contain IgG, but not IgA, anti‐toxin A and anti‐toxin B antibodies while it is only the IgA class of anti‐toxin A antibodies, and not the IgG class, that could neutralize toxin A in vitro and in vivo.47, 48 Babcock et al.40 solved this apparent dilemma by showing that a combination of 3 different monoclonal IgG anti‐toxin A antibodies could neutralize toxin A activity in vitro and prevent disease in the hamster model in vivo. Each of the 3 antibodies recognized a different toxin A domain: the first neutralized toxin A enzymatic activity, while the second prevented toxin A binding to its receptor on enterocytes, and the third prevented toxin internalization after binding to the receptor.
Thus, the mechanism of action of IVIG is most likely through the transfer of IgG anti‐toxin A antibodies that gain access to the intestinal lumen presumably secondary to inflammation‐induced mucosal damage and neutralize toxin A. Transfer of yet undetected IgA anti‐toxin A antibodies that prevent toxin A from binding to its receptor is much less likely, although possible.
The present study has limitations. As in all retrospective studies, selection bias was unavoidable. In addition, the decision to initiate IVIG administration was dependent on the attending physician, who also decided the dose, leading to heterogeneity in the total dose of IVIG infused. Such heterogeneity, however, is primarily the result of a lack of a standard dose for IVIG infusion for CDC in the published literature, as reported above. In addition, since IVIG is not yet approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of severe CDC, standard treatment was not discontinued in any of the reports to date, including ours.
Choosing appropriate controls for patients suffering from severe CDC is challenging. This patient population is usually frail, with severe and multiple underlying diseases. The deteriorating clinical condition (and subsequently the need for multiple antibiotics) may be either the result of or the cause of CDC. Furthermore, IVIG has been in short supply for several years and therefore it has been expensive, making its administration to the number of patients needed to design adequately‐powered controlled studies difficult. These are mainly the reasons no randomized, multicenter, placebo‐controlled trial on IVIG use in severe CDC has been conducted to date.
Conclusions
In the present study, we report the results of IVIG use for the treatment of 21 patients with severe CDC. This is the largest cohort to our knowledge in the literature. Unlike previous studies on the subject, the present report provided 2 scales for disease assessment: the first based on the extent of colonic involvement and the second measuring the severity of systemic involvement using the APACHE II score. The latter was positively associated with mortality in this context. Of the 21 study patients treated with IVIG, only 9 patients (43%) survived their illness. This is the highest reported mortality rate among all studies on this subject so far. Further studies on the ideal timing of IVIG infusion, dose, and patient selection are needed before accepting IVIG as a standard of care for severe CDC treatment. The role of APACHE II score in the decision to use IVIG is promising and should be validated in randomized controlled trials.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Indrani Mukherjee, MD, for her help and expertise in proofreading the manuscript.
- Secular trends in hospital‐acquired Clostridium difficile disease in the United States, 1987–2001.J Infect Dis.2004;189:1585–1589. , , .
- Fulminant Clostridium difficile: an underappreciated and increasing cause of death and complications.Ann Surg.2002;235:363–372. , , , et al.
- An epidemic, toxin gene‐variant strain of Clostridium difficile.N Engl J Med.2005;353:2433–2441. , , , et al.
- Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea in a region of Quebec from 1991 to 2003: a changing pattern of disease severity.CMAJ.2004;171:466–472. , , , et al.
- Comparison of two toxins produced by Clostridium difficile.Infect Immun.1981;34:1036–1043. , , .
- Asymptomatic carriage of Clostridium difficile and serum levels of IgG antibody against toxin A.N Engl J Med.2000;342:390–397. , , , .
- Human antibody response to Clostridium difficile toxin A in relation to clinical course of infection.Infect Immun.1994;62:384–389. , , , .
- Risk factors for Clostridium difficile carriage and C. difficile‐associated diarrhea in a cohort of hospitalized patients.J Infect Dis.1990;162:678–684. , , .
- Severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Dis Colon Rectum.1995;38:350–354. , , .
- A predominantly clonal multi‐institutional outbreak of Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea with high morbidity and mortality.N Engl J Med.2005;353:2442–2449. , , et al.
- Factors associated with failure of metronidazole in Clostridium difficile‐associated disease.J Clin Gastroenterol.2004;38:414–418. , , .
- Treatment of Clostridium difficile‐associated disease: old therapies and new strategies.Lancet Infect Dis.2005;5:549–557. , , .
- Relatively poor outcome after treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis with metronidazole.Clin Infect Dis.2005;40:1586–1590. , , , et al.
- Increasing risk of relapse after treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis in Quebec, Canada.Clin Infect Dis.2005;40:1591–1597. , , , et al.
- Treatment with intravenously administered gamma globulin of chronic relapsing colitis induced by Clostridium difficile toxin.J Pediatr.1991;118:633–637. , , , , , .
- Gamma globulin administration in relapsing Clostridium difficile‐induced pseudomembranous colitis with a defective antibody response to toxin A.Acta Clin Belg.1995;50:36–39. , , , .
- Recurrent Clostridium difficile infection in a patient with selective IgG1 deficiency treated with intravenous immune globulin and Saccharomyces boulardii.Clin Infect Dis.1995;20(suppl 2):S266–S268. , , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.Gut.2002;51:456. .
- Descriptive study of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.J Antimicrob Chemother.2004;53:882–884. .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for resistant Clostridium difficile infection.Age Ageing.2006;35:85–86. , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe, refractory, and recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhea.Dis Colon Rectum.2006;49:640–645. , , , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Gut.1997;41:366–370. , , , et al.
- Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for refractory Clostridium difficile toxin colitis in chronic kidney disease: case reports and literature review.NDT Plus.2008;1:20–22. , , , et. al.
- Use of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Am J Geriatr Pharmacother.2007;5:48–51. , .
- Clinical outcomes of intravenous immune globulin in severe clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea.Am J Infect Control.2007;35:131–137. , , , et al.
- Successful treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis with intravenous immunoglobulin.J Gastrointestin Liver Dis.2008;17:353–359. , , , .
- A durable response to relapsing Clostridium difficile colitis may require combined therapy with high‐dose oral Vancomycin and intravenous immune globulin.Infect Dis Clin Pract.2006;14:217–220. , , , et al.
- APACHE II: a severity of disease classification system.Crit Care Med.1985;13:818–829. , , , .
- Colonic abnormalities on CT in adult hospitalized patients with Clostridium difficile colitis: prevalence and significance of findings.AJR Am J Roentgenol.2006;186:1393–1400. , , , , , .
- Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea: predictors of severity in patients presenting to the emergency department.Can J Gastroenterol.2003;17:369–373. , , , .
- Impact of emergency colectomy on survival of patients with fulminant Clostridium difficile colitis during an epidemic caused by a hypervirulent strain.Ann Surg.2007;245:267–272. , , , et al.
- Risk factors for severity and relapse of pseudomembranous colitis in an elderly population.Colorectal Dis.2007;9:173–177. , , et al.
- Prognostic criteria in Clostridium difficile colitis.Am J Gastroenterol.1996;91:460–464. , , , , .
- Clostridium difficile toxin a stimulates macrophage‐inflammatory protein‐2 production in rat intestinal epithelial cells.J Immunol.1998;160:6039–6045. , , , et al.
- Increased substance P responses in dorsal root ganglia, intestinal macrophages during Clostridium difficile toxin a enteritis in rats.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.1997;94:4788–4793. , , , et al.
- Cytokine response by human monocytes to Clostridium difficile toxin a and toxin B.Infect Immun.1991;59:3659–3666. , , , , , .
- Bacterial translocation, intestinal microflora and morphological changes of intestinal mucosa in experimental models of Clostridium difficile infection.J Med Microbiol.1998;47:591–598. , , , .
- Immunoglobulin G directed against toxins A and B of Clostridium difficile in the general population and patients with antibiotic‐associated diarrhea.Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis.1994;18:205–209. , .
- Serum antibody response to toxins A and B of Clostridium difficile.J Infect Dis.1983;148:93–100. , , , et al.
- Human monoclonal antibodies directed against toxins A and B prevent Clostridium difficile‐induced mortality in hamsters.Infect Immun.2006;74:6339–6347. , , , et al.
- Serum antibody response to Clostridium difficile toxins in patients with Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.Infection.1985;13:97–101. , , , .
- Relationship between levels of Clostridium difficile toxin A and toxin B and cecal lesions in gnotobiotic mice.Infect Immun.1989;57:2123–2127. , , , .
- Protection against experimental pseudomembranous colitis in gnotobiotic mice by use of monoclonal antibodies against Clostridium difficile toxin A.Infect Immun.1991;59:1192–1195. , , , , .
- Systemic and mucosal antibody responses to toxin A in patients infected with Clostridium difficile.J Infect Dis.1992;166:1287–1294. , , .
- Transcutaneous immunization with Clostridium difficile toxoid A induces systemic and mucosal immune responses and toxin A‐neutralizing antibodies in mice.Infect Immun.2007;75:2826–2832. , , , et al.
- Serum antitoxin antibodies mediate systemic and mucosal protection from Clostridium difficile disease in hamsters.Infect Immun.1999;67:527–538. , , , et al.
- Human colonic aspirates containing immunoglobulin A antibody to Clostridium difficile toxin A inhibit toxin A‐receptor binding.Gastroenterology.1992;102:35–40. , , , .
- Selective neutralization of a bacterial enterotoxin by serum immunoglobulin A in response to mucosal disease.Infect Immun.1995;63:3166–3173. , , , , .
- Secular trends in hospital‐acquired Clostridium difficile disease in the United States, 1987–2001.J Infect Dis.2004;189:1585–1589. , , .
- Fulminant Clostridium difficile: an underappreciated and increasing cause of death and complications.Ann Surg.2002;235:363–372. , , , et al.
- An epidemic, toxin gene‐variant strain of Clostridium difficile.N Engl J Med.2005;353:2433–2441. , , , et al.
- Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea in a region of Quebec from 1991 to 2003: a changing pattern of disease severity.CMAJ.2004;171:466–472. , , , et al.
- Comparison of two toxins produced by Clostridium difficile.Infect Immun.1981;34:1036–1043. , , .
- Asymptomatic carriage of Clostridium difficile and serum levels of IgG antibody against toxin A.N Engl J Med.2000;342:390–397. , , , .
- Human antibody response to Clostridium difficile toxin A in relation to clinical course of infection.Infect Immun.1994;62:384–389. , , , .
- Risk factors for Clostridium difficile carriage and C. difficile‐associated diarrhea in a cohort of hospitalized patients.J Infect Dis.1990;162:678–684. , , .
- Severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Dis Colon Rectum.1995;38:350–354. , , .
- A predominantly clonal multi‐institutional outbreak of Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea with high morbidity and mortality.N Engl J Med.2005;353:2442–2449. , , et al.
- Factors associated with failure of metronidazole in Clostridium difficile‐associated disease.J Clin Gastroenterol.2004;38:414–418. , , .
- Treatment of Clostridium difficile‐associated disease: old therapies and new strategies.Lancet Infect Dis.2005;5:549–557. , , .
- Relatively poor outcome after treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis with metronidazole.Clin Infect Dis.2005;40:1586–1590. , , , et al.
- Increasing risk of relapse after treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis in Quebec, Canada.Clin Infect Dis.2005;40:1591–1597. , , , et al.
- Treatment with intravenously administered gamma globulin of chronic relapsing colitis induced by Clostridium difficile toxin.J Pediatr.1991;118:633–637. , , , , , .
- Gamma globulin administration in relapsing Clostridium difficile‐induced pseudomembranous colitis with a defective antibody response to toxin A.Acta Clin Belg.1995;50:36–39. , , , .
- Recurrent Clostridium difficile infection in a patient with selective IgG1 deficiency treated with intravenous immune globulin and Saccharomyces boulardii.Clin Infect Dis.1995;20(suppl 2):S266–S268. , , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.Gut.2002;51:456. .
- Descriptive study of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.J Antimicrob Chemother.2004;53:882–884. .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for resistant Clostridium difficile infection.Age Ageing.2006;35:85–86. , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe, refractory, and recurrent Clostridium difficile diarrhea.Dis Colon Rectum.2006;49:640–645. , , , , .
- Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Gut.1997;41:366–370. , , , et al.
- Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for refractory Clostridium difficile toxin colitis in chronic kidney disease: case reports and literature review.NDT Plus.2008;1:20–22. , , , et. al.
- Use of intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe Clostridium difficile colitis.Am J Geriatr Pharmacother.2007;5:48–51. , .
- Clinical outcomes of intravenous immune globulin in severe clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea.Am J Infect Control.2007;35:131–137. , , , et al.
- Successful treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis with intravenous immunoglobulin.J Gastrointestin Liver Dis.2008;17:353–359. , , , .
- A durable response to relapsing Clostridium difficile colitis may require combined therapy with high‐dose oral Vancomycin and intravenous immune globulin.Infect Dis Clin Pract.2006;14:217–220. , , , et al.
- APACHE II: a severity of disease classification system.Crit Care Med.1985;13:818–829. , , , .
- Colonic abnormalities on CT in adult hospitalized patients with Clostridium difficile colitis: prevalence and significance of findings.AJR Am J Roentgenol.2006;186:1393–1400. , , , , , .
- Clostridium difficile‐associated diarrhea: predictors of severity in patients presenting to the emergency department.Can J Gastroenterol.2003;17:369–373. , , , .
- Impact of emergency colectomy on survival of patients with fulminant Clostridium difficile colitis during an epidemic caused by a hypervirulent strain.Ann Surg.2007;245:267–272. , , , et al.
- Risk factors for severity and relapse of pseudomembranous colitis in an elderly population.Colorectal Dis.2007;9:173–177. , , et al.
- Prognostic criteria in Clostridium difficile colitis.Am J Gastroenterol.1996;91:460–464. , , , , .
- Clostridium difficile toxin a stimulates macrophage‐inflammatory protein‐2 production in rat intestinal epithelial cells.J Immunol.1998;160:6039–6045. , , , et al.
- Increased substance P responses in dorsal root ganglia, intestinal macrophages during Clostridium difficile toxin a enteritis in rats.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.1997;94:4788–4793. , , , et al.
- Cytokine response by human monocytes to Clostridium difficile toxin a and toxin B.Infect Immun.1991;59:3659–3666. , , , , , .
- Bacterial translocation, intestinal microflora and morphological changes of intestinal mucosa in experimental models of Clostridium difficile infection.J Med Microbiol.1998;47:591–598. , , , .
- Immunoglobulin G directed against toxins A and B of Clostridium difficile in the general population and patients with antibiotic‐associated diarrhea.Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis.1994;18:205–209. , .
- Serum antibody response to toxins A and B of Clostridium difficile.J Infect Dis.1983;148:93–100. , , , et al.
- Human monoclonal antibodies directed against toxins A and B prevent Clostridium difficile‐induced mortality in hamsters.Infect Immun.2006;74:6339–6347. , , , et al.
- Serum antibody response to Clostridium difficile toxins in patients with Clostridium difficile diarrhoea.Infection.1985;13:97–101. , , , .
- Relationship between levels of Clostridium difficile toxin A and toxin B and cecal lesions in gnotobiotic mice.Infect Immun.1989;57:2123–2127. , , , .
- Protection against experimental pseudomembranous colitis in gnotobiotic mice by use of monoclonal antibodies against Clostridium difficile toxin A.Infect Immun.1991;59:1192–1195. , , , , .
- Systemic and mucosal antibody responses to toxin A in patients infected with Clostridium difficile.J Infect Dis.1992;166:1287–1294. , , .
- Transcutaneous immunization with Clostridium difficile toxoid A induces systemic and mucosal immune responses and toxin A‐neutralizing antibodies in mice.Infect Immun.2007;75:2826–2832. , , , et al.
- Serum antitoxin antibodies mediate systemic and mucosal protection from Clostridium difficile disease in hamsters.Infect Immun.1999;67:527–538. , , , et al.
- Human colonic aspirates containing immunoglobulin A antibody to Clostridium difficile toxin A inhibit toxin A‐receptor binding.Gastroenterology.1992;102:35–40. , , , .
- Selective neutralization of a bacterial enterotoxin by serum immunoglobulin A in response to mucosal disease.Infect Immun.1995;63:3166–3173. , , , , .
Copyright © 2010 Society of Hospital Medicine