Background: Clostridioides difficile resistant to macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B (MLSB) has not been reported in China.
Methods: In a cross-sectional study in two tertiary hospitals, C. difficile isolates from stool specimens from community-onset, hospital-associated diarrheal patients were analyzed for toxin genes, genotype, and antibiotic resistance, and the patients' clinical charts were reviewed.
Results: A total of 190 (15.2%) isolates (102 A+B+ and 88 A-B+) from 1250 community acquired (CA) patients were recovered and all were susceptible to vancomycin and metronidazole. High-level resistance (minimum inhibitory concentration > 128 mg/L) to erythromycin and clindamycin was recorded in 77.9% and 88.4% of the tested isolates, respectively. Furthermore, 89.3% (159/178) of the isolates resistant to MLSB carried the erythromycin resistance methylase gene (ermB). The statistically significant factors associated with C. difficile infection (CDI) induced by A-B+ isolates with MLSB resistance included a severity score of >2 (odds ratio [95% confidence interval], 7.43 [2.31-23.87]) and platelet count (cells × 109 cells/L) < 100 [5.19 (1.58-17.04)]. The proportion of A-B+ increased with enhanced CDI severity (x2 = 21.62, P < 0.001), which was significantly higher than that of ermB-positive A+B+ in severity score of 4 (x2 = 8.61, P = 0.003). The average severity score of ermB-positive isolates was significantly higher than that of ermB-negative isolates in A-B+ (Z = -2.41, P = 0.016).
Conclusion: The ermB-positive A-B+ C. difficile with MLSB resistance is described for the first time as a potential epidemic clone inducing severe CDI in CA diarrheal patients in Eastern China.
Keywords: Clostridioides difficile; macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B resistance; molecular characteristic.
© 2020 Zhao et al.