Dorr, Mary Beth | P1 | ENDOGENOUS SERUM IGG ANTIBODIES TO CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE TOXIN B ARE ASSOCIATED WITH PROTECTION AGAINST C. DIFFICILE INFECTION RECURRENCE |  |
Mizrahi, Assaf | P2 | CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION MOUSE MODEL FOR THE ANALYSIS OF NATURAL SYSTEMIC AND MUCOSAL IMMUNITY | |
Mizrahi, Assaf | P3 | PROSPECTIVE EVALUATION OF THE ADAPTIVE IMMUNE RESPONSE TO SLPA IN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION | |
Tsai, Pei-Jane | P4 | CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INDUCES AN ATP-P2X7 MEDIATED INFLAMMASOME ACIVATION | |
Baines, Simon | P5 | PROBIOTICS TO PREVENT INDUCTION OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION? |  |
Dong, Danfeng | P6 | EFFECTS OF INTESTINAL COLONIZATION BY CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE AND STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS ON MICROBIOTA DIVERSITY IN HEALTHY INDIVIDUALS IN CHINA |  |
Piotrowski, Michal | P7 | THE INFLUENCE OF FOOD OLIGOSACCHARIDES (PREBIOTICS) ON ADHESION OF C. DIFFICILE TO THE HUMAN COLONIC EPITHELIAL CELL LINE (HT29/C1) IN VITRO: A PILOT STUDY |  |
Moura, Ines | P8 | MONITORING BACTERIAL POPULATIONS IN AN IN VITRO MODEL OF THE HUMAN COLON WITH RESOLVED CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION FOLLOWING FAECAL MICROBIOTA TRANSPLANTATION | |
Normington, Charmaine | P9 | USE OF AN IN VITRO GUT MODEL OF RECURRENT CDI TO EVALUATE THE IMPACT OF FECAL TRANSPLANTS | |
Buckley, Anthony | P10 | SER-109 PREVENTS RECURRENCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN A DOSE DEPENDENT MANNER IN AN IN VITRO MODEL OF THE GI MICROBIOME | |
Govoni, Gregory | P11 | DEVELOPMENT OF A PROBIOTIC TREATMENT FOR C. DIFFICILE INFECTIONS USING HYBRID MICROBES THAT ACT VIA MULTIPLE MODES OF ACTION |  |
Janoir, Claire | P12 | IMPACT OF SACCHAROMYCES BOULARDII CNCM I-745 ON THE IN VITRO BIOFILM OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE | |
Mahnic, Aleksander | P13 | C. DIFFICILE GROWTH AND CYTOTOXICITY ASSOCIATED BACTERIAL SIGNATURES IN THE IN VITRO MODULATED GUT MICROBIOTA |  |
Siddiqui, Farida | P14 | ISOGENIC BINARY TOXIN C. DIFFICILE MUTANT (CDT-) SHOWS DECREASED ADHERENCE IN VITRO COMPARED TO THE PARENT (CDT+) STRAIN |  |
Kong, Ka Yi | P15 | CLARIFYING THE MECHANISMS OF RIBOTYPE 002 VIRULENCE IN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION | |
Romo, Mariana | P16 | PHENOTYPIC CHARACTERIZATION OF NON-TOXIGENIC CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE STRAINS ISOLATED FROM MEXICAN PATIENTS | |
Dawson, Lisa | P17 | PLEOTROPIC REGULATORY PROTEINS SINR AND CD2215 ARE ASSOCIATED WITH BIOFILM FORMATION, MOTILITY AND SPORULATION IN C. DIFFICILE | |
Androga, Grace | P18 | PUTATIVE VIRULENCE FACTORS IDENTIFIED IN LARGE CLOSTRIDIAL NEGATIVE, BINARY TOXIN PRODUCING C. DIFFICILE STRAINS |  |
Hong, Stacey | P19 | PHENOTYPIC CHARACTERISATION OF AN EMERGING MLST CLADE 2 LINEAGE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE , RIBOTYPE 251 |  |
Barwinska-Sendra, Anna | P20 | STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISATION OF THE CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE S-LAYER | |
de Castro Brito, Gerly Anne | P21 | C. DIFFICILE TOXIN A INHIBITES WNT / Β-CATENIN PATHWAY IN VIVO AND IN VITRO VIA RAC-1 INACTIVATION | |
de Castro Brito, Gerly Anne | P22 | EFFECTS OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE -TOXIN A AND B ON ENTERIC GLIAL CELLS |  |
Garneau, Julian | P23 | IMPACT OF THE HIGHLY PREVALENT PHI027 PROPHAGE ON THE BIOLOGY AND VIRULENCE OF THE EPIDEMIC CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE STRAIN RIBOTYPE 027 | |
Kelly, Abigail | P24 | C. DIFFICILE PEPTIDOGLYCAN REMODELLING DURING ENGULFMENT |  |
Harris, Hannah | P25 | DEVELOPMENT OF AN IN VITRO TEST OF COLONISATION RESISTANCE TO CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN FAECAL SAMPLES | |
Schwanbeck, Julian | P26 | CHEMOTAXIS IN CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE | |
Wang, Ziyi | P27 | INVESTIGATING THE BIOLOGICAL CONTRIBUTION OF C. DIFFICILE TYPE IV PILI PROTEINS |  |
Boekhoud, Ilse | P28 | GENOME ORGANIZATION DRIVES THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSES TO SUB-INHIBITORY CONCENTRATIONS OF POLYMERASE INHIBITORS IN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE | |
Corver, Jeroen | P29 | PROTEOLYTIC ACTIVITY OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE HTRA IS IMPORTANT FOR HTRA EXPRESSION LEVELS, BUT NOT FOR SPORULATION | |
Corver, Jeroen | P30 | IDENTIFICATION AND VALIDATION OF TWO PEPTIDE MARKERS FOR THE RECOGNITION OF C. DIFFICILE MLST-1 AND MLST-11 BY MALDI-MS | |
Oatley, Peter | P31 | S-LAYER SECRETION IN C. DIFFICILE | |
O'Beirne, Shauna | P32 | CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE CELL SURFACE BIOGENESIS | |
Fernandes, Nadia | P33 | IDENTIFICATION OF GENES IMPLICATED IN COLONISATION AND SURVIVAL OF C. DIFFICILE IN THE GUT, USING RANDOM TRANSPOSON MUTAGENESIS | |
Paiva, Ana | P34 | THE HISTONE-LIKE PROTEIN HUPA OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE COMPACTS DNA | |
Rennhack, Kim Eileen | P35 | INTERACTOMIC STUDIES OF PROTEINS INVOLVED IN THE STICKLAND FERMENTATION OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE | |
Leite Costa, Cecília | P36 | MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION AND COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SPORULATION OF A NEW STRAIN OF C. DIFFICILE MLST CLADE 2 ISOLATED AT A CANCER HOSPITAL IN BRAZIL. | |
Turk, Dušan | P37 | STRUCTURAL INSIGHT INTO THE CELL WALL-ANCHORING MODULE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE S-LAYER PROTEINS |  |
Harrison, Mark | P38 | FACTORS AFFECTING PRODUCTION OF THE BACTERIOSTATIC COMPOUND PARA-CRESOL IN C. DIFFICILE | |
Ingle, Patrick | P39 | GENERATION OF A SNP-FREE, FULLY ERYTHROMYCIN-SENSITIVE C. DIFFICILE 630 STRAIN USING CRISPR-CAS9 MUTAGENESIS | |
Poquet, Isabelle | P40 | A CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE BIOFILM: REMODELLING METABOLISM AND CELL SURFACE TO BUILD A 3D ARCHITECTURE |  |
Troitzsch, Daniel | P41 | INVOLVEMENT OF PERR AND ITS OPERON IN THE OXIDATIVE STRESS RESPONSE IN CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE |  |
Michel, Annika-Marisa | P42 | ADAPTATION OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE TO OSMOTIC STRESS | |
Alves Feliciano, Carolina | P43 | OXYGEN TOLERANCE AND REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES PROTECTION IN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE | |
Sievers, Susanne | P44 | ELUCIDATION OF THE MECHANISTIC DETAILS OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE ´S TOLERANCE TO HIGH CONCENTRATIONS OF DIFFERENT BILE ACIDS |  |
Peltier, Johann | P45 | THE DIVERSE ROLES OF CYCLIC-DI-AMP IN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE | |
Kint, Nicolas | P46 | DECIPHERING OF THE SIGMA B SIGNALLING ACTIVATION PATHWAY IN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE | |
Logan, Susan | P47 | DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING OF A RECOMBINANT BCLA3 SPORE GLYCOPEPTIDE VACCINE FOR PREVENTION OF C. DIFFICILE INFECTION | |
Nale, Janet | P48 | COMBATING CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION WITH AN OPTIMISED BACTERIOPHAGE COCKTAIL |  |
Reigadas, Elena | P49 | FECAL MICROBIOTA TRANSPLANTATION FOR RECURRENT CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION: EXPERIENCE WITH LYOPHILIZED CAPSULES | |
Roshan Hesari, Niloufar | P50 | MECHANISMS OF ANTIBACTERIAL ACTION OF PLANT EXTRACTS AGAINST CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE |  |
Vendrik, Karuna | P51 | TWO YEARS OF EXPERIENCES WITH TREATMENT OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE INFECTIONS USING THE NETHERLANDS DONOR FECES BANK | |
Duperchy, Esther | P52 | RIDINILAZOLE (RDZ) REDUCES RECURRENCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION (CDI) WITH MINIMAL IMPACT ON THE GUT MICROBIOTA |  |
Bassères, Eugénie | P53 | VISUALIZATION OF THE ASSOCIATION OF FIDAXOMICIN AND CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE SPORES | |
Chapman, Sarah | P54 | ISOLATION AND CHARATERISATION OF A NOVEL BACTERIOCIN THAT IS ACTIVE AGAINST CLINICALLY RELAVENT STRAINS OF C. DIFFICILE |  |
Sambol, Susan | P55 | ABSENCE OF PASSIVE TRANSFER OF TOXIN GENES FROM TOXIGENIC C. DIFFICILE (CD) TO NON-TOXIGENIC C. DIFFICILE (NTCD) STRAIN M3 |  |
Blount, Ken | P56 | EVALUATING SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF MICROBIOTA-BASED THERAPIES FOR RECURRENT CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION: THE ADDED INSIGHT OF MICROBIOME PROFILING AND THE MICROBIOME HEALTH INDEX IN TWO PHASE 2 CONTROLLED TRIALS OF RBX2660 | |
Nikolic, Natasa | P57 | ORAL TEICOPLANIN FOR SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT OF RECURRENT CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION | |
Wu, Yuan | P58 | HIGH RATE OF MULTI DRUG RESISTANT CLADE 4 CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE ISOLATES FROM CHINA AND CARRIAGE OF ANTI BIOTIC RESISTANT GENES | |
Sevilla, Eloisa | P59 | ABSENCE OF A METRONIDAZOLE RESISTANCE MARKER IN CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE PCR-RIBOTYPE 078 ISOLATES FROM PORCINE ORIGIN |  |
Vernon, Jonathan | P60 | FLUOROQUINOLONE RESISTANCE MUTATION CONFERS A FITNESS ADVANTAGE ON CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN A CONTINUOUS CO-CULTURE MODEL | |
Avberšek, Jana | P61 | ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE OF C. DIFFICILE ISOLATES OBTAINED FROM TWO PIG FARMS IN LONGITUDINAL STUDY |  |
Stas, Jeroen | P62 | MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS IN CDI: SWITCHING TO NAAT AS SCREENING METHODOLOGY? |  |
Bajaj-Elliott, Mona | P63 | DETECTION OF TOXIN-PRODUCING CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN THE PAEDIATRIC POPULATION AT GREAT ORMOND STREET HOSPITAL (GOSH): AN EVALUATION OF CURRENT METHODOLOGIES AND DEVELOPMENT OF A TESTING ALGORITHM. | |
Van Broeck, Johan | P64 | ENHANCED SENSITIVITY AND ACCURACY BY LASER READING OF RAPID TESTS FOR CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE GDH DETECTION |  |
Koskinen, Juha M. | P65 | GDH AND TOXIN A/B CONCENTRATIONS DO NOT DEPEND ON STOOL CONSISTENCY IN PATIENTS WITH CLINICAL SUSPICION FOR CDI |  |
Barbut, Frédéric | P66 | THE SIMOA ASSAY FOR DETECTION OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE TOXINS HAS A BETTER SENSITIVITY THAN THE CYTOTOXICITY ASSAY |  |
Barbut, Frédéric | P67 | SUBTYPING CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE PCR-RIBOTYPE 018 STRAINS BY ANALYSIS OF VIRULOME, RESISTOME, WGMLST AND MLVA |  |
Kim, Jong Wan | P68 | DETECTION OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE BASED ON REAL-TIME PCR WITH PNA PROBE | |
Savolainen, Roosa | P69 | EVALUATION OF A NEW RANDOM-ACCESS ANTIGEN TEST FOR THE DETECTION OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE |  |
Pride, Michael | P70 | DIAGNOSTIC ASSAYS IN SUPPORT OF PFIZER’S PHASE 3 C. DIFFICILE VACCINE EFFICACY STUDY |  |
Aira Gomez, Andrea | P71 | CLINICAL RELEVANCE OF CT VALUE IN C. DIFFICILE INFECTION DIAGNOSIS | |
Mihaylova, Sashka | P72 | TWO YEARS EXPERIENCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE DIAGNOSIS |  |
Krutova, Marcela | P73 | THE IMPROVEMENT OF DIAGNOSTICS IN SUSPECTED C. DIFFICILE INFECTION BY IMPLEMENTATION OF A GASTROINTESTINAL PATHOGEN MULTIANALYTE TEST | |
Krutova, Marcela | P74 | HOW IMPORTANT ARE MICROBIOLOGICAL DATA IN THE SURVEILLANCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTIONS? | |
Reigadas, Elena | P75 | ROLE OF C. DIFFICILE IN HOSPITAL ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTHCARE WORKERS |  |
Lubarda, Jovana | P76 | C. DIFFICILE PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT: AN ASSESSMENT OF CURRENT CLINICAL PRACTICE PATTERNS OF PHYSICIANS |  |
Silva, Rodrigo Otávio | P77 | MOLECULAR EPIDEMIOLOGY OF C. DIFFICILE ISOLATES FROM A UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF BRAZIL | |
Rizzardi, Kristina | P78 | C. DIFFICILE INFECTION IN SWEDEN: RESULTS FROM THE NATIONAL SURVEILLANCE PROGRAM 2009-2016 |  |
Tickler, Isabella | P79 | MOLECULAR EPIDEMIOLOGY AND ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE PROFILES OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE STRAINS IN THE UNITED STATES BETWEEN 2011-2017 | |
Kato, Haru | P80 | THE BURDEN OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE INFECTION IN JAPAN: A PROSPECTIVE MULTI-CENTER STUDY |  |
Connor, Mairead | P81 | PREVALENCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE RIBOTYPES IN NORTHERN IRELAND 2009 – 2018 | |
Anttila, Veli-Jukka | P82 | CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION IN PATIENTS WITH INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE: A CASE CONTROL STUDY |  |
Murabata, Mayumi | P83 | INTESTINAL COLONIZATION OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE OF IN PEDIATRIC INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE PATIENTS IN JAPAN |  |
Putsathit, Papanin | P84 | EPIDEMIOLOGY AND ANTIMICROBIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN PIGLETS IN THAILAND | |
Kim, Heejung | P85 | A NATIONWIDE STUDY OF MOLECULAR EPIDEMIOLOGY AND ANTIBICROBIAL RESISTANCE OF C. DIFFICILE IN SOUTH KOREA | |
Collins, Deirdre | P86 | INVESTIGATING CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA USING LINKED DATA |  |
Pai, Hyunjoo | P87 | PCR-RIBOTYPE VARIABILITY OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE STRAINS FROM THE PATIENTS WITH HOSPITAL-ACQUIRED C. DIFFICILE INFECTIONS (HACDI), COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED CDI (CACDI), TOXIGENIC COLONIZATION AND NON-TOXIGENIC COLONIZATION. |  |
Regev-Yochay, Gili | P88 | CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE (CD) CARRIERS: RISK FACTORS AND INCIDENCE OF CD INFECTIONS (CDI) | |
Grilc, Eva | P89 | A TIME SERIES ANALYSIS OF RESPIRATORY SYNCITIAL VIRUS (RSV) AND ITS POSSIBLE ASSOCIATION WITH CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTIONS (CD) |  |
Lim, Su-Chen | P90 | EMERGENCE OF PREDOMINANTLY COMMUNITY-ASSOCIATED CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE RT 012 IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA: RISK FACTORS AND RELATEDNESS TO STRAINS FROM ASIA |  |
Lim, Su-Chen | P91 | WHOLE-GENOME SEQUENCING REVEALS POTENTIAL SPREAD OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE BETWEEN HUMANS, FOODS AND THE ENVIRONMENT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA |  |
Niwa , Hidekazu | P92 | WHOLE-GENOME ANALYSIS OF CLOSTRIDIOIDES DIFFICILE STRAINS ISOLATED FROM HORSES IN JAPAN |  |
Bolea, Rosa | P93 | MOLECULAR CHARACTERISATION AND ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE PATTERNS IN C. DIFFICILE ISOLATED FROM THE ENVIRONMENT, HUMANS, AND OTHER ANIMAL SPECIES ORIGINATED FROM THE IBERIAN PENINSULA |  |
Kim, Ha-Young | P94 | PREVALENCE AND CHARACTERIZATION OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE FROM DOGS AND CATS IN KOREA |  |
Wojtacka, Joanna | P95 | CLOSTRIUM DIFFICILE IN HONEY |  |
Maurischat, Sven | P96 | CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE CONTAMINATION OF GERMAN RETAIL FOOD | |
Maurischat, Sven | P97 | ZERO PREVALENCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN GERMAN WILD GAME | |
Rabold, Denise | P98 | ARE PET OWNERS AT INCREASED RISK OF C. DIFFICILE INFECTION? |  |
Perumalsamy, Sicilia | P99 | HIGH PREVALENCE OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE IN SOIL, MULCH AND LAWN SAMPLES FROM WESTERN AUSTRALIAN (WA) HOSPITALS |  |
Granata, Guido | P100 | DOES NAAT TEST USE INCREASE THE RATE OF C. DIFFICILE INFECTION DIAGNOSIS? |  |
Janezic, Sandra | P101 | CAN SHOE SOLES CONTRIBUTE TO C. DIFFCILLE DISSEMINATION IN HOSPITAL ENVIRONMENT? |  |
Janezic, Sandra | P102 | WHOLE GENOME ANALYSIS OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE PCR RIBOTYPE 150 ISOLATED FROM HUMANS, ANIMALS, ENVIRONMENT AND FOOD |  |
Tkalec, Valerija | P103 | POTATOES SAMPLED ACROSS EUROPE ARE COMMONLY CONTAMINATED WITH CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE |  |
Jose, Shinsmon | P104 | OBESITY-ASSOCIATED GUT MICROBIOTA ENHANCES CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE INFECTION IN MICE | |
Rupnik, Maja | P105 | VARIOUS WAYS OF INTERACTIONS BETWEEN CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE AND GUT MICROBIOTA |  |
Bijlani, Akash | P106 | HOSPITAL COST SAVINGS USING ULTRASENSITIVE SINGLE MOLECULE COUNTING FOR DETECTION OF CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE TOXINS A AND B |  |