Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey

Abstract Background Although the incidence, severity and mortality of Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile infection (CDI) have been increasing, patients’ quality of life changes resulting from CDI have not been studied thoroughly. This study aimed at exploring the consequences of CDI on quality o...

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Main Authors: Lise Lurienne, Pierre-Alain Bandinelli, Thibaut Galvain, Charles-Alexis Coursel, Caterina Oneto, Paul Feuerstadt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-02-01
Series:Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41687-020-0179-1
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spelling doaj-8e5454630eb04f7aab8979b0f33059572020-11-25T00:18:41ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Patient-Reported Outcomes2509-80202020-02-014111110.1186/s41687-020-0179-1Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population surveyLise Lurienne0Pierre-Alain Bandinelli1Thibaut Galvain2Charles-Alexis Coursel3Caterina Oneto4Paul Feuerstadt5Da VolterraDa VolterraDa VolterraDa VolterraConcorde Medical GroupYale School of MedicineAbstract Background Although the incidence, severity and mortality of Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile infection (CDI) have been increasing, patients’ quality of life changes resulting from CDI have not been studied thoroughly. This study aimed at exploring the consequences of CDI on quality of life through patients’ perspective. Methods An observational, cross-sectional study involving 350 participants with a self-reported CDI diagnosis was conducted through an online self-administered survey. Participants were grouped into those who had active disease (“Current CDI”) and those who had a history of CDI (“Past CDI”). Results One hundred fifteen participants (33%) reported Current CDI and 235 (67%) reported Past CDI. A large majority of participants admitted that their daily activities were impacted by the infection (93.9% and 64.7% of Current and Past CDI respondents respectively, p < 0.05). Physical and psychological consequences of CDI were experienced by 63.5% and 66.1% of participants with active CDI. Despite the infection being cleared, these consequences were still frequently experienced in Past CDI cohort with similar rates (reported by 73.2% of respondents for both, physical consequences p = 0.08; psychological consequences p = 0.21). After the infection, 56.6% of respondents noted that post-CDI symptoms remained; 40.9% believed they would never get rid of them. Conclusions While the societal burden of CDI is well described in the literature, our study is one of the first aimed at understanding the major burden of CDI on quality of life. Our results highlight the long-lasting nature of CDI and further reinforce the need for enhanced therapeutics in the prevention and treatment of this devastating infection.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41687-020-0179-1C. difficile infection (CDI)Quality of lifeRecurrencePsychological consequencesSurveyQuestionnaire
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lise Lurienne
Pierre-Alain Bandinelli
Thibaut Galvain
Charles-Alexis Coursel
Caterina Oneto
Paul Feuerstadt
spellingShingle Lise Lurienne
Pierre-Alain Bandinelli
Thibaut Galvain
Charles-Alexis Coursel
Caterina Oneto
Paul Feuerstadt
Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey
Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes
C. difficile infection (CDI)
Quality of life
Recurrence
Psychological consequences
Survey
Questionnaire
author_facet Lise Lurienne
Pierre-Alain Bandinelli
Thibaut Galvain
Charles-Alexis Coursel
Caterina Oneto
Paul Feuerstadt
author_sort Lise Lurienne
title Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey
title_short Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey
title_full Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey
title_fullStr Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey
title_full_unstemmed Perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a Clostridioides difficile infection: a US population survey
title_sort perception of quality of life in people experiencing or having experienced a clostridioides difficile infection: a us population survey
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes
issn 2509-8020
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract Background Although the incidence, severity and mortality of Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile infection (CDI) have been increasing, patients’ quality of life changes resulting from CDI have not been studied thoroughly. This study aimed at exploring the consequences of CDI on quality of life through patients’ perspective. Methods An observational, cross-sectional study involving 350 participants with a self-reported CDI diagnosis was conducted through an online self-administered survey. Participants were grouped into those who had active disease (“Current CDI”) and those who had a history of CDI (“Past CDI”). Results One hundred fifteen participants (33%) reported Current CDI and 235 (67%) reported Past CDI. A large majority of participants admitted that their daily activities were impacted by the infection (93.9% and 64.7% of Current and Past CDI respondents respectively, p < 0.05). Physical and psychological consequences of CDI were experienced by 63.5% and 66.1% of participants with active CDI. Despite the infection being cleared, these consequences were still frequently experienced in Past CDI cohort with similar rates (reported by 73.2% of respondents for both, physical consequences p = 0.08; psychological consequences p = 0.21). After the infection, 56.6% of respondents noted that post-CDI symptoms remained; 40.9% believed they would never get rid of them. Conclusions While the societal burden of CDI is well described in the literature, our study is one of the first aimed at understanding the major burden of CDI on quality of life. Our results highlight the long-lasting nature of CDI and further reinforce the need for enhanced therapeutics in the prevention and treatment of this devastating infection.
topic C. difficile infection (CDI)
Quality of life
Recurrence
Psychological consequences
Survey
Questionnaire
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41687-020-0179-1
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