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General Orthopaedics

MASQUELET TECHNIQUE FOR INFECTED SEGMENTAL DEFECTS OF LONG BONES IN A LOW-RESOURCE SETTING OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: TECHNICAL ADAPTATIONS AND OUTCOME

The European Bone and Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) Meeting, Basel, Switzerland, 12–14 October 2023.



Abstract

Aim

infected segmental bone defect (ISBD) is frequent in developing countries. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of the Masquelet technique in the treatment of ISBD in a low-resource setting.

Patients and Method

We performed a prospective cohort study during the period from 2018 to 2022. Patients with infected bone defect of long bones were included. Management protocol consisted of two stages in all patients. The first stage consisted in debridement, tissues biopsy for microbiological culture, stabilization with external fixator and defect filling with gentamicin cement spacer. The second stage consisted of reconstruction using a cancellous bone autograft alone, or a mixture of autograft with allograft (demineralized bone matrix + tricalcium phosphate) and 1 gram of vancomycin powder. All patients were followed-up for at least one year. The results were assessed based on both objective (clinical and radiographic evaluation) and subjective (limb function and patient satisfaction) criteria. Main outcomes were bone union, reoperation and failure rates, union time, and limb function.

Results

We included 31 patients in this study (80.6% men), with a median age of 35 [9 – 80] years. The tibia was affected in 12 cases and the femur in 15 cases. The median size of bone defect was 4 [1.5 – 12] cm. The most prevalent microorganisms were Klebsiella pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus. The mean interval between both stages was 14 (8 – 36) weeks and the median follow-up period after the second stage was 20 [12-62] months. External fixation was used in both stages in 25(80%) cases. Bone union was achieved in 26 (83.8%) patients of whom 24 without recurrence of infection, over a median time of 9 [6 – 16] months. All patients with a mixed graft (allograft and autograft) impregnated with local antibiotics achieved bone union. Two patients needed reoperation for relapse of infection between both stages, and subsequently achieved bone union without recurrence of infection. There were three cases of failure related to persistent infection or insufficient fixation stability in the second stage.

Conclusions

Masquelet technique is a reliable procedure that can be safely performed in limited resources settings with satisfactory results. The mixture of autograft and allograft when available, all mixed with vancomycin seems to give promising results.


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