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. 2006 May;186(5):1393-400.
doi: 10.2214/AJR.04.1697.

Colonic abnormalities on CT in adult hospitalized patients with Clostridium difficile colitis: prevalence and significance of findings

Affiliations

Colonic abnormalities on CT in adult hospitalized patients with Clostridium difficile colitis: prevalence and significance of findings

Lorraine Ash et al. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2006 May.

Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of an abnormal colon on CT in adult inpatients with Clostridium difficile colitis, compare the clinical presentation of these patients, and determine whether CT findings predicted the need for surgical treatment.

Materials and methods: Over a 21-month period, 152 of 572 inpatients with C. difficile colitis were identified and had CT scans performed within 2 weeks of the diagnosis. These were independently and retrospectively reviewed by two reviewers. Those with colonic wall thickness greater than 4 mm were considered positive (CT-positive patients) and were further reviewed for specific findings in the colon. All 152 patients with CT scans were also retrospectively reviewed using the hospital information system for certain clinical parameters, admitting diagnoses, and reasons for scanning. The following were compared using several statistical tests: clinical parameters in CT-positive and CT-negative patients and surgical and nonsurgical groups to determine if positive scans or surgical treatment could be clinically predicted; specific CT findings in CT-positive patients to see if an association was found with clinical parameters or surgical treatment; and admitting diagnoses and reasons for scanning in scanned and unscanned populations to see which patients were more likely to undergo CT.

Results: Seventy-six (50%) of 152 scanned hospitalized patients with C. difficile colitis were CT-positive. These patients most often had segmental involvement (50 [66%] of 76 patients), with the rectum (60 [82%] of 73 patients) and sigmoid colon (61 [82%] of 74 patients) most often affected. Positive scans were associated with increased WBC, abdominal pain, and diarrhea. Patients with signs and symptoms of infection or abdominal complaints were more likely to be scanned. No statistical correlation was found between specific CT findings and clinical parameters or clinical parameters and patients requiring surgery. There was no predictive value of specific CT findings for surgical treatment.

Conclusion: Half of the patients scanned had an abnormal CT, with segmental colonic disease more common than diffuse. Positive scans were more likely in patients with leukocytosis, abdominal pain, and fever. Specific CT findings did not correlate with clinical parameters and could not predict surgical treatment.

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