Background: Diarrhea is a common problem in the pediatric post-solid organ transplant and post-hematopoietic stem cell transplant populations. Infectious etiology incidences are poorly defined, and the possibility of multi-organism positivity is often uninvestigated. The aim of this study is to utilize stool multiplex GIP assays to compare the PTP and NTP regarding the incidence and profiles of single-organism and multi-organism infectious diarrhea.
Methods: A single-center retrospective review was conducted, investigating stool multiplex GIP panel results over a more than 3-year period, for pediatric patients. Assays test for 23 viral, bacterial, and protozoal organisms.
Results: Positive assays in the PTP and NTP were 70/101 (69.3%) and 962/1716 (56.1%), respectively (P = .009). Thirty-two percent (32/101) of assays within the PTP were multi-organism positive, significantly more than 14.8% (254/1716) in the NTP (P < .00001). There was no significant difference in the incidence of single-organism positives, 37.6% (38/101) in PTP and 41.3% (708/1716) in the NTP. The PTP demonstrated a statistically significantly higher incidence of the following organisms within multi-agent positive GIPs (P < .05 for each): Clostridioides difficile, Cryptosporidium, EPEC, norovirus, and sapovirus.
Conclusions: The pediatric PTP demonstrates higher incidence of positive GIPs, higher rate of multi-organism positivity, and unique infectious organism incidence profiles. These data can provide a framework for understanding organism-specific pathogenicity factors, assessing the clinical impact of enteric co-infection, and understanding the utility of this testing modality in this unique population.
Keywords: diarrhea; multi-organism; pediatric; polymerase chain reaction; transplant.
© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.