Jiang Y, Chowdhury S, Xu BH, Meybodi MA, Damiris K, Devalaraju S, Pyrsopoulos N. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is associated with worse intestinal complications in patients hospitalized for Clostridioides difficile infection. World J Hepatol 2021; 13(11): 1777-1790 [PMID: 34904045 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v13.i11.1777]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Nikolaos Pyrsopoulos, FAASLD, AGAF, FACG, MD, PhD, Director, Professor, Department of Medicine, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, 185 S. Orange Avenue, Medical Science Building H-536, Newark, NJ 07101, United States. pyrsopni@njms.rutgers.edu
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Retrospective Cohort Study
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Hepatol. Nov 27, 2021; 13(11): 1777-1790 Published online Nov 27, 2021. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v13.i11.1777
Table 1 Comparison of demographic data for patients hospitalized with Clostridioides difficile infection with coexisting nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, viral liver disease and alcoholic liver disease
Variables
CDI with NAFLD
CDI with VLD
CDI with ALD
P value
n (weighted)
7239
11857
5938
CDI with NAFLD vs CDI with VLD
CDI with NAFLD vs CDI with ALD
Age (yr)
56.32 ± 0.42
57 ± 0.26
56.13 ± 0.37
0.15
0.73
18-39
1133 (15.6%)
791 (6.7%)
557 (9.4%)
< 0.0001
< 0.0001
40-49
1290 (17.8%)
1811 (15.3%)
1051 (17.7%)
50-59
1618 (22.4%)
4873 (41.1%)
2021 (34%)
60-69
1620 (22.4%)
2791 (23.5%)
1439 (24.2%)
≥ 70
1578 (21.8%)
1591 (13.4%)
870 (14.7%)
Sex
< 0.0001
< 0.0001
Female
5023 (69.4%)
5795 (48.9%)
2300 (38.7%)
Race
< 0.0001
0.17
Caucasian
5427 (75%)
6920 (58.4%)
4358 (73.4%)
African American
482 (6.5%)
2773 (23.4%)
525 (8.8%)
Hispanic
648 (9%)
1144 (9.6%)
515 (8.7%)
Hospital bed size
0.033
0.9
Large
4241 (58.6%)
7414 (62.6%)
3461 (58.3%)
Hospital region
< 0.0001
< 0.0001
Northeast
1091 (15.1%)
2618 (22.1%)
1243 (20.9%)
Midwest
1618 (22.3%)
2514 (21.1%)
1584 (26.7%)
South
3008 (41.6%)
4208 (35.5%)
1671 (28.1%)
West
1522 (21%)
2517 (21.2%)
1440 (24.3%)
Hospital type
< 0.0001
0.22
Urban teaching
3401 (47%)
7207 (60.8%)
3065 (51.6%)
Insurance
< 0.0001
< 0.0001
Medicare
3086 (42.6%)
5493 (46.3%)
2239 (37.7%)
Medicaid
914 (12.6%)
3329 (28.1%)
1261 (21.2%)
Private
2526 (34.9%)
1835 (15.5%)
1391 (23.4%)
Median household income for ZIP Code, %
< 0.0001
0.61
Q1
1790 (24.7%)
4205 (35.5%)
1592 (26.8%)
Q2
1824 (25.2%)
3128 (26.4%)
1407 (23.7%)
Q3
1926 (26.6%)
2353 (19.8%)
1503 (25.3%)
Q4
1511 (20.9%)
1657 (14%)
1252 (21.1%)
Table 2 Comparison of comorbid conditions and complications for patients hospitalized with Clostridioides difficile infection with coexisting nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, viral liver disease and alcoholic liver disease
Table 3 Multivariate regression analysis of outcomes for patients hospitalized for Clostridioides difficile infection with coexisting nonalcoholic fatty liver disease vs viral liver disease
Table 4 Multivariate regression analysis of outcomes for patients hospitalized for Clostridioides difficile infection with coexisting nonalcoholic fatty liver disease vs alcoholic liver disease