Tuesday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Mohamed A. Ebrahim, MD
Ascension Saint Joseph Hospital
Chicago, IL
From 1999–2022, enterocolitis due to Clostridium difficile caused 116,979 deaths, with an overall age-adjusted mortality rate (AAMR) of 1.51. Mortality rose from 0.28 in 1999, peaked at 2.36 in 2008, then declined to 0.98 in 2020, stabilizing around 1.00 in 2021–2022. The >65 years age group had the highest mortality, increasing from 2.15 in 1999 to 17.46 in 2011, then declining to 6.67 in 2022. For those < 65 years, mortality remained lower, rising from 0.01 in 1999 to a peak of 0.28 in 2015, then decreasing to 0.16 in 2022. The analysis highlighted racial and ethnic disparities. Non-Hispanic Whites had an AAMR of 1.59, Non-Hispanic Blacks 1.27, and Hispanics 1.12. Gender analysis showed females with a slightly higher average AAMR of 1.52 compared to males at 1.50. Urban areas had an AAMR of 1.59 compared to 1.42 in rural areas. Regionally, the Northeast had the highest AAMR at 1.76, followed by the Midwest (1.61), South (1.40), and West (1.39). Rhode Island (3.09), Ohio (2.38), Maine (2.37), Missouri (2.32), and Maryland (2.23) had the highest AAMR.
