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General Orthopaedics

PROSTHETIC JOINT INFECTIONS: MORTALITY RATE OVER THE LAST TEN YEARS

European Bone and Joint Infection Society (EBJIS), Nantes, France, September 2017



Abstract

Aim

There is a constant increase of joint arthroplasties to improve the quality of life of an aging population. Prosthetic-joint infections are rare, with an incidence of 1–2%, but they represent serious complications in terms of morbidity and mortality. The mortality was known to be approaching 8% in the elderly. The aim of this retrospective study is to reassess the two-year mortality rate over the last ten years.

Method

Patients having a prosthetic joint infection at Lausanne University Hospital (Switzerland) between 2006 and 2016 were included. The two-year mortality rate depending on sex, age, type of infection and type of surgical therapy was measured.

Results

444 patients (61% hips, 37% knees) were identified with a median age of 70 years. The two-year mortality rate was 5%. There was no difference between hip and knee prosthesis but the mortality was higher for men (6%) than women (4%). The rate has not changed over the last ten years. However, the mortality rate is more than doubling (12%) for patients over eighty years old. Furthermore, chronic prosthetic-joint infections seem to have a higher mortality rate (7%) than acute ones (4%). Finally, patients treated with a one-stage or two-stage exchange seem to have a lower mortality rate (<1%) than the ones treated with debridement and retention (11%).

Conclusion

The mortality seems to be less than thought before and depends on sex, age, type of infection and type of surgical therapy.


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