EN
The study has been carried out to determine the frequency of C. difficile recovery in stool cultures and the rate of C. difficile toxin A detection in faecal specimens of patients with nosocomial diarrhoea. Clinical specimens comprised 4414 stool samples collected from 1998 to 2002 from adult patients hospitalised in different wards of a university-affiliated hospital (1200 beds) and suspected of C. difficile-associated disease (CDAD). There have been 1308 (29.6%) specimens positive for C. difficile culture (15.1% in 1998, 29.5% in 1999, 33.8% in 2000, 31.2% in 2001 and 32.0% in 2002). The highest number of C. difficile strains was cultured from stool samples of patients hospitalised in the haematology/oncology ward (51.1% of all isolates), neurology (8.3%), nephrology (8.0%), gastrointestinal surgery (7.0%) and neurosurgery (6.2%) wards. The testing for C. difficile toxin A yielded 847 (19.2%) positive samples and 3567 (80.8%) toxin A-negative results. The percentage of C. difficile toxin A-positive samples was 29.4% in 1998, 17.5% in 1999, 23.2% in 2000, 17.1% in 2001 and 15.0% in 2002. In the analysed period we observed an increase in the number of stool specimens tested for C. difficile and an increase in the number of C. difficile culture-positive samples. A decrease in the number of C. difficile toxin A-positive samples was noted in the last 2 years of the study. This phenomenon may be due to an improved antibiotic policy of the hospital.