Treatment of antibiotic-associated colitis with vancomycin

Abstract
Sixty-five patients were treated with oral vancomycin for Clostridium difficile colitis associated with treatment of infection by antibiotics. Colitis was confirmed by endoscopy in patients with diarrhoea and positive tests on diarrhoeal stools for Cl. difficile and/or its cytotoxin or, if endoscopy could not be performed, by the presence of fever and peripheral or faecal leucocytosis. Vancomycin dosage ranged from 125 to 500 mg four times daily for an average of about ten days. The mean duration of diarrhoea after starting therapy was four days; abdominal pain and fever usually resolved in two or three days. Post-treatment carriage of Cl. difficile was common. Eighteen per cent of patients developed a recurrence of colitis after treatment was discontinued, but responded to treatment with oral vancomycin, metronidazole, or bacitracin. After comparison of our results with those reported by others we concluded that vancomycin remains the treatment of choice for patients who are acutely and severely ill with Cl. difficile .