Video

VIDEO: Gut microbiota may predict C. diff treatment response


 

At ACG 2015

References

HONOLULU – Could gut microbiota be a better predictor than clinical factors of a patient’s response to treatment for Clostridium difficile infection?

In a study of 88 patients with C. difficile, the overall treatment failure rate was 12.5% – but clinical factors such as age, sex, ongoing antibiotic exposure, and hospitalization status failed to predict which patients wouldn’t respond to treatment.

So, “we aimed to identify if there are any gut microbiota signatures to predict treatment response and treatment failure,” explained the study’s lead author, Dr. Sahil Khanna of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, Dr. Khanna discussed the study results and why gut microbiota may be an effective predictor of treatment responders and nonresponders.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

Sofosbuvir reduces liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C
MDedge Infectious Disease
High ALT/AST ratio linked to fatty liver risk in HCV
MDedge Infectious Disease
Widespread rotavirus vaccination caused plunge in pediatric hospitalizations
MDedge Infectious Disease
VIDEO: Antibiotic stewardship program impacted C. diff. rates in kids
MDedge Infectious Disease
IDWeek: Despite better drugs, HCV deaths keep rising
MDedge Infectious Disease
IDWeek: VA found no evidence of CRE transmission through duodenoscopes
MDedge Infectious Disease
Risk score assesses likelihood of fecal transplant failure
MDedge Infectious Disease
FDA warns of serious liver injury from HCV drugs Viekira Pak and Technivie
MDedge Infectious Disease
Experts debate fecal transplants as first-line therapy for CDI
MDedge Infectious Disease
Oral H. pylori vaccine found effective, safe
MDedge Infectious Disease