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General Orthopaedics

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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 86 - 86
7 Nov 2023
Berberich C
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Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in geriatric and/or multimorbid patients is an enormous challenge for orthopaedic surgeons. Revision procedures have also been demonstrated to expose patients to higher infection risks. Prior patient stratification according to presumed infection risks, followed by a more potent local antibiotic prophylaxis protocol with selective use of DALBC, is an interesting strategy to decrease the burden of PJI in high risk patients.

The PubMed & EMBASE databases were screened for publications pertaining to the utilization of DALBC in cement for infection prophylaxis & prosthesis fixation. 6 preclinical & 7 clinical studies were identified which met the inclusion criteria and were stratified by level of clinical evidence. Only those studies were considered which compared the PJI outcome in the DALBC vs the SALBC group.

DALBC have been shown to exert a much stronger and longer lasting inhibition of biofilm formation on many PJI relevant bacteria (gram-positive and gram-negative pathogens) than single gentamicin-only containing cements.

DALBC use (COPAL G+C) in the intervention arm of 7 clinical studies has led to a significant reduction of PJI cases in a) cemented hemiarthroplasty procedures (3 studies, evidence level I and III), in b) cemented septic revision surgeries (2 studies, evidence level III), in c) cemented aseptic knee revisions (1 study, evidence level III) and in d) cemented primary arthroplasties in multi-morbid patients (1 study, evidence level III-IV). These benefits were not associated with more systemic side effects or a higher prevalence of broad antimicrobial resistancies.

Use of DALBC is likely to be more effective in preventing PJI in high risk patients. The preliminar findings so far may encourage clinicians to consolidate this hypothesis on a wider clinical range.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 66 - 66
1 Dec 2019
Berberich C Sanz-Ruiz P
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Aim

There is an ongoing controversy whether the observed benefit of infection risk reduction by ALBC outweighs the risk of possible antimicrobial resistance development.

Methods

The scientific & clinical literature in PubMed, Medline and Embase has been systematically reviewed with the keywords “antibiotic resistance”, “antibiotic loaded bone cement”, “local antibiotics”, “bacterial colonization” and “joint infection”. In total 28 relevant publications were found with the majority of them reporting laboratory results. Only 7 papers focused on clinical septic situations & patient data