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Editorial: Clostridium difficile infection in the Asia-Pacific region
Editorial   Open access   Peer reviewed

Editorial: Clostridium difficile infection in the Asia-Pacific region

Dazhi Jin, Yi-Wei Tang and Thomas V. Riley
Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology, Vol.12, 983563
2022
PMCID: PMC9360922
PMID: 35959370
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Published (Version of Record)CC BY V4.0 Open Access
url
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2022.983563View
Published (Version of Record) Open

Abstract

Asia-Pacific region Cellular and Infection Microbiology clinical features Clostridioides difficile genotype molecular epidemiology
Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile has been recognized as a leading pathogen responsible for antimicrobial-associated diarrhea worldwide. C. difficile infection (CDI) results in a variety of clinical manifestations, ranging from asymptomatic carriage to severe life-threatening sepsis, toxic megacolon and pseudomembranous colitis. The molecular epidemiology of CDI has been well documented in North America, Europe and Australia, and C. difficile isolated from these regions has been studied in detail with different molecular types of C. difficile circulating. There were approximately 250,000 CDI cases, 13,000 deaths and medical costs of US$1 billion in the United States in 2017 (http://dx.doi.org/10.15620/cdc:82532). However, CDI has been largely under-studied in the Asia-Pacific region and the few studies that have been conducted suggest a different population of C. difficile in this region and unique characteristics of CDI. Thus, we organized a Research Topic in “Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology” in 2019 which included 8 peer-reviewed articles providing a historical overview of CDI in general, as well as summarizing genomic, epidemiological and clinical features of CDI in the Asia-Pacific region. Due to the growing interest in C. difficile in the region, in October, 2021, we were invited to arrange another Research Topic to highlight more novel findings. Of great interest were papers about country-specific epidemiology and papers featuring clinical pictures from different countries in the Asia-Pacific region. So far, four articles have been successfully published in this Research Topic including two systematic reviews and two research papers contributed by the 27 authors. The Research Topic has been viewed over 3,000 times so far, each of the four articles has been accessed over 1,000 times. There is a systematic review and meta-analysis, derived from 79 studies conducted between 1981 and 2019, authored by Rodriguez-Palacios et al., which revealed sources of heterogeneity, high-risk foods and an unexpected higher prevalence of C. difficile in tropical areas. Luo et al. reviewed CDI prevalence in hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) patients in 43 studies from 2014 to 2021. The above two reviews comprehensively summarized the distribution of C. difficile in the human diet and updated important features about CDI among HSCT recipients, a significant contribution to CDI epidemiology worldwide. The remaining two articles described the molecular epidemiology of CDI in Eastern China, including risk factors for the dominant multi-locus sequence typing (ST) 81 (Yang et al.), and an atypical septicemia caused by C. difficile contributed by Wang et al. A C. difficile ST54 strain that was toxin A negative and toxin B positive and genetically related to ST37 was reported from China because of significant antimicrobial resistance and sporulation capacity. This was the first report of a monomicrobial bloodstream infection caused by C. difficile ST54 in China and provided important information for clinicians. C. difficile is now being recognized as an important cause of healthcare-associated infection in the Asia-Pacific region possibly because of rapid economic growth, the aging population, and continuing inappropriate use of antimicrobials. However, C. difficile is often still neglected in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with diarrhea in the region, and CDI cases are often missed since clinicians have poor awareness with inappropriate testing being used. To date, relatively limited data have still been available on the epidemiology, genome evolution, prevalence, and impact of CDI in the Asia-Pacific region. Current literature shows that the molecular characteristics of C. difficile in the Asia-Pacific region are different from those in North America, Europe, and Australia. Hypervirulent C. difficile ribotype 027/ST1 and other binary toxin-producing C. difficile strains have rarely been described in this region. Genome-based phylogenetic clade 4, including C. difficile ST37, ST81, ST369, and others, was the predominant genotype. Despite the CDI prevalence in this region being similar to that in other continents, there have been few reports of severe outcomes of CDI (https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01217-20). However, some recent studies have described severe CDI cases significantly associated with the ST37 genotype (https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01898-16), and the sepsis case induced by ST54 reported in this Research Topic suggests that better surveillance for severe CDI in the Asia-Pacific region is required. In addition, it has been reported that age as a risk factor for CDI was much lower in China (less than 60 years old) than that seen in developed countries (https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01898-16). Given the population in the Asia-Pacific region comprises approximately 60% of the world’s population, and it is aging, the possibility of a C. difficile-related health crisis exists. The four articles published so far on this Research Topic present meaningful CDI data, and we hope that more scientists and clinicians will focus on CDI studies from the Asia-Pacific region. There is still a variety of questions on CDI in the Asia-Pacific region that require answers, and these should be addressed in a systematic manner. What are the main transmission pathways for CDI? What are the genomic characteristics of Asian C. difficile and how has the genome evolved? What is known about C. difficile in animals in the Asia-Pacific region and, most importantly, the environment? Are there any correlations between contaminated food and CDI? Are traditional dietary habits in the region risk factors for CDI or C. difficile colonization, or are they possibly protective? Consequently, we are going to continue promoting this Research Topic, to attract more contributors, and to focus on the above questions in order to better understand the epidemiology, prevalence and medical burden of CDI in the Asia-Pacific region.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.120 Inflammatory Bowel Diseases & Infections
1.120.1133 Clostridium Infections
Web Of Science research areas
Immunology
Microbiology
ESI research areas
Microbiology
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