Abstract
The treatment of chronic osteomyelitis requires both appropriate surgical and antibiotic management. Prolonged intravenous antibiotic therapy followed by oral therapy is widely utilised. Despite this, the long-term recurrence rate is approximately 25%. The aim of this cohort study was to examine the effectiveness of marginal surgical resection in combination with local application of antibiotics (Collatamp G - gentamicin in a collagen fleece). Post-operatively this was followed by a short course of intravenous antibiotics, then oral antibiotics, to 6 weeks in total. A cohort of 50 patients from a 10-year period, 2000 to 2010, with chronic osteomyelitis was identified. Most were male (n= 35, 70%) and the average age is 40.9 years (SD 15.9). The mean follow-up duration was 3.2 years (SD 1.8). The average length of admission was 9.8 days (SD 11.4). 6 patients (12%) suffered recurrence of infection requiring further treatment. We used the Cierny and Mader classification to stratify the patients further. There were 24 (48%) ‘A’ hosts and 26 (52%) ‘B’ hosts. ‘A’ hosts had a shorter duration of admission (7.1 days) than ‘B’ hosts (12.3 days). There was no significant difference between recurrence rates of ‘A’ and ‘B’ hosts. The available pre-operative C-reactive protein (CRP) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) levels did not predict disease recurrence. Overall, the disease-free probability for this cohort was 0.80. A similar cohort treated with prolonged systemic and oral antibiotics reported by Simpson and colleagues (JBJS Br 2001) had a disease-free probability at 0.68. Local administration of gentamicin in a collagen fleece leads to improved disease-free probability when compared with prolonged systemic antibiotic treatment. We believe this is a useful component in the management of chronic osteomyelitis.