C difficile infection (CDI)

First line for 1st episode of mild, moderate or severe CDI

Important: Therapy

Vancomycin 125mg PO 6 hourly

If any features of life-threatening infection (see definitions in Notes below) - seek urgent surgical review

Notes:

Treatment duration: 10 days

 

 

Second line for 1st episode of mild, moderate or severe CDI (i.e. failure to improve despite 7 days of 1st line therapy)

Important: Therapy

Discuss with an infection specialist.

 

Notes:

Second line options include:

- Oral Fidaxomicin

- High-dose oral Vancomycin (500mg) with IV Metronidazole

 

If any features of life-threatening infection (see definitions in Notes below) - seek urgent surgical review

Recurrence of CDI within 12 weeks

Important: Therapy

Fidaxomicin 200mg PO 12 hourly

If treatment failure identified as incomplete initial treatment course, then retreat as per 1st line treatment

Notes:

Treatment duration: 10 days

Recurrence of CDI after 12 weeks

Important: Therapy

Vancomycin 125mg PO 6 hourly

(i.e. as per 1st line treatment)

Notes:

Treatment duration: 10 days

Second or further recurrences of CDI

Important: Therapy

Discuss with infection specialist

 

 

Notes:

Options include:

- Faecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT)

- Tapering Vancomycin course

Important: Notes

Review existing antibiotic treatment and stop it unless essential. If an antibiotic is still essential, consider changing to one with a lower risk of causing C. difficile infection (e.g. non 4C antibiotics)

Review the need to continue any treatment with:

  • proton pump inhibitors
  • other medicines which effect GI activity or motility e.g. laxatives, loperamide
  • medicines that may cause problems if people are dehydrated e.g. NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors, angiotensin‑2 receptor antagonists, diuretics.

 

Definitions:

Diarrhoea - passage of three or more loose or liquid stools per day, or more frequently than is normal for the individual (i.e. in patients with chronic loose stools) The frequent passing of formed stools is not diarrhoea.

C difficile infection – diarrhoea with a C difficile toxin positive result.

C diff equivocal (GDH positive / C diff toxin negative result) - Usually reflects colonisation with C diff rather than infection, even in the presence of diarrhoea. Rarely, C diff equivocal results are found in stool from patients with very early genuine C diff infection, before detectable levels of toxin have accumulated. Recommend repeat stool sample if initial result equivocal and no alternative diagnosis made. Patients with two C diff equivocal results are highly unlikely to have C diff infection and diarrhoea is likely due to another cause, including alternative infectious pathogens so ensure final culture results reviewed.

Life-threatening CDI: CDI with any one of the following present: admission to ICU for CDI; hypotension with or without required use of vasopressors; ileus or significant abdominal distension; mental status changes, WBC ≥35 cells x 109 /L or <2 cells x 109 /L; serum lactate >2.2 mmol/l; end organ failure (mechanical ventilation, renal failure)