Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) remains a major concern for surgeons and patients. It presents a large burden for healthcare systems, requiring expensive, invasive treatments, which are not always successful.1,2 Effective treatment starts with accurate diagnosis.
Previous definitions of PJI have been helpful and provided reference standards for diagnostic studies,3-5 but no single definition has been adopted.6 The European Bone & Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) has therefore worked with the Musculoskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) and the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) Study Group for Implant-Associated Infections (ESGIAI) to produce a new definition, derived from the most robust evidence on diagnosis of PJI. This fulfils the two primary roles of a definition. Firstly, it provides a practical guide for clinicians to decide if an infection is present or not, based on widely available investigations. Secondly, it facilitates researchers to perform studies in patients with confirmed infection or not.
The elements of the definition were chosen on the specificity or sensitivity of each test. Unfortunately, we do not have any perfect tests, and currently we have no tests which can reliably exclude infection. A test with a high specificity (such as histology) is only positive in those with infection and so can be used to confirm the presence of infection. Sensitive tests can suggest the presence of infection but will not confirm it unless they also have high specificity. As new tests are evaluated, they can be added.
The novel ‘traffic light’ approach divides patients by the likelihood of infection (green or amber) or confirmed infection (red). It recognizes the difficulty of trying to create a simplistic ‘black or white’ definition of PJI.6,7 This mirrors the approach in the recent Consensus Definition of Fracture-Related Infection.8,9
We hope that this work helps clinicians of all expertise and allows informed discussions with patients about the diagnosis of PJI. The definition is now undergoing validation trials and we welcome further work on this.
Fig. 1
References
1. Middleton R , Khan T , Alvand A . Update on the diagnosis and management of prosthetic joint infection in hip and knee arthroplasty . Bone Joint 360 . 2019 ; 8 ( 4 ): 5 – 13 . Google Scholar
2. Kurtz SM , Lau E , Watson H , Schmier JK , Parvizi J . Economic burden of periprosthetic joint infection in the United States . J Arthroplasty . 2012 ; 27 ( 8 )(suppl): 61 – 5 .e1. Crossref PubMed Google Scholar
3. Parvizi J , Gehrke T ; International Consensus Group on Periprosthetic Joint Infection . Definition of periprosthetic joint infection . J Arthroplasty . 2014 ; 29 ( 7 ): 1331 . Crossref PubMed Google Scholar
4. Osmon DR , Berbari EF , Berendt AR , et al. ; Infectious Diseases Society of America. Diagnosis and management of prosthetic joint infection: clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America . Clin Infect Dis . 2013 ; 56 ( 1 ): e1 – e25 . Google Scholar
5. Shohat N , Bauer T , Buttaro M , et al. Hip and knee section, what is the definition of a periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) of the knee and the hip? can the same criteria be used for both joints?: proceedings of international consensus on orthopedic infections . J Arthroplasty . 2019 ; 34 ( 2S ): S325 – S327 . Crossref PubMed Google Scholar
6. Villa JM , Pannu TS , Piuzzi N , Riesgo AM , Higuera CA . Evolution of diagnostic definitions for periprosthetic joint infection in total hip and knee arthroplasty . J Arthroplasty . 2020 ; 35 ( 3S ): S9 – S13 . Crossref PubMed Google Scholar
7. Oussedik S , Gould K , Stockley I , Haddad FS. Defining periprosthetic infection ; do we have a workable gold standard? Bone Joint J . 2012 ; 94-B : 1455 – 1456 . Google Scholar
8. McNally M , Govaert G , Dudareva M , Morgenstern M , Metsemakers W-J . Definition and diagnosis of fracture-related infection . EFORT Open Rev . 2020 ; 5 ( 10 ): 614 – 619 . Crossref PubMed Google Scholar
9. Govaert GAM, Kuehl R , Atkins BL , et al. ; Fracture-Related Infection (FRI) Consensus Group. Diagnosing fracture-related Infections: current concepts and recommendations . J Orthop Trauma . 2020 ; 34 ( 1 ): 8 – 17 . Google Scholar
Open access statement
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence, which permits the copying and redistribution of the work only, and provided the original author and source are credited. See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.