Aim. Treatment of prosthetic joint infection (PJI) by systemic administration of high doses of long-term
Aim. Haematogenous prosthetic joint infections account for 20-35% of total prosthetic infections. Debridement, antibiotics and implant retention (DAIR) is a well-accepted treatment for these infections and probably the most desired by surgeons, since it tries to maintain a functional and stable implant. However, the risk of DAIR failure is not negligible and some risk factors have been described, and also, different scores, such as CRIME80. Nonetheless, less is known about the impact of positive blood cultures may have on DAIR treatment. The aim of our study is to analyze whether the presence of a positive culture is a risk factor for DAIR failure. Method. A retrospective cohort study of 50 late acute haematogenous TKA infections was performed from 2015 to 2023. DAIR failure was defined as the need of a subsequent intervention either a new DAIR or a revision surgery. So, patients were divided into two groups depending on the surgical outcome: successful (SG) vs failure (FG). Demographic variables including age, gender, affected side and body mass index were collected. Patient's comorbidities were also collected including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), cirrhosis and chronic renal failure, etc. Other variables, such as ones included in CRIME80 (C-reactive protein (CRP) >150mg/dl and polyethylene exchange), were also collected. Results. 30 patients had a successful DAIR outcome (60%). Age and sex do not act as risk factors [OR 0.7 (0.2-2.6) and OR 0.4 (0.1-1.3)]. Neither do COPD [OR 3.3 (0.5-2.0), p=0.2]; RA [OR 0.8 (0.2-3.1), p=0.7]; CRP value [3.2 (0.9-11.2), p=0.06]; and polyethylene exchange [OR 0.4 (0.1-2.5), p= 0.3]. Thirty-five blood cultures (70%) were obtained before surgery (20 SG and 15 FG). Nine of the obtained blood cultures were positive (25.7%), being 7 from FG (46.7%) [OR 7.6 (1.3-4.8), p=0.02]. A logistic regression was performed where positive blood cultures were the only significant variable to predict DAIR failure (OR 12, 95% CI 1.1−18, p=0.049), after adjusting for all CRIME80 variables. Skin and soft tissue origin was described in 5 of the nine positive blood cultures (55.6%). Cardiovascular system was the second most common spread (22.2%), and then followed by urogenital and digestive tract. The most common microorganism in FG was Staphylococcus aureus (57.1%) [OR 6.4 (0.2-18.0), p=0.2]. Conclusions. Positive blood cultures may be another risk factor for DAIR failure. This can be important in diagnosis and it may be taken into account in
Aim. Arthroscopic interventions have revolutionized the treatment of joint pathologies. The appropriate diagnostics and treatment are required for infections after ligament reconstructions using non-resorbable material such as tendon grafts, anchors, and sutures, prone to biofilm formation. The infection rate is around 1% for knee and shoulder, while up to 4% for Achilles tendon reconstructions. Despite high number of these procedures worldwide, there is limited evidence about the best treatment protocol. Our study aimed to provide a general protocol for the treatment of small implants for soft tissue reconstruction. Method. Between 2019 and 2023, we treated 48 infections of ligament, meniscus, and tendon reconstructions out of 7291 related procedures performed in the same time period. Early infection (<30 days) were treated with an arthroscopic debridement and implant retention (DAIR), except Achilles tendons had open DAIR, while those with delayed or chronic infection (>30 days) were treated with extensive debridement and lavage combined with one-stage exchange (OSE) or implant removal. During surgery, at least 5 microbiological s and samples for histopathology were obtained. The removed material was sonicated. After surgery, all patients were one week on iv.
Aim. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a pre-formulated irrigation solution. 1. (containing ethanol, acetic acid, sodium acetate, benzalkonium chloride, and sterile water) compared to saline solution in managing acute periprosthetic joint infections (A-PJI) during Debridement, Antibiotic, and Implant Retention (DAIR) surgeries. The primary objective is to assess the healing rate using this solution. 1. versus saline in A-PJI patients, with “cure” defined by a set of criteria including no recurrence, wound issues, or need for ongoing suppressive
Aim. An instrumented blood culture system automatically flags when growth within the culture medium has been detected (‘work in progress’), and subsequently when the organism has been identified. We explore using this data to switch patients to oral therapy within 72 hours post-surgery, reducing costs and improving antimicrobial stewardship. Method. This retrospective review focused on clinically significant culture-positive bone and joint infections over a 5-month period in 2022. Two cohorts were defined as either having positive intraoperative microbiology at <72 hours or at ≥72 hours. Results. 150 patients were included. 133/150(88%) exhibited microbial growth <72hours. Of these, 98/133(74%) had all organisms identified <72-hours, and 34/133(26%) had additional organisms ≥72 hours. 19/151(12%) patients had their first positive cultures ≥72hrs from sampling. The most common isolates identified within 72 hours were S. aureus(30%), Enterobacteriaceae (26%), and Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus (CoNS)(19%). If no growth was observed by 48 hours, there was a 69.6% probability that subsequent growth wouldn't occur; this probability increases to 81.9% by 72 hours, 88.7% by 96 hours, 91.0% by 120 hours, and 95.0% by 144 hours (see figure 1). The most common isolates identified ≥72 hours were CoNS(28%), Cutibacterium acnes(16%) and S. aureus(12%). Assessing oral
Aim. Successful management of native Joint septic arthritis (SA) hinges on the timely initiation of appropriate
Aim. The aim of this study was to develop an in-house multiplex PCR real-time assay on the LightCycler 480 system (Roche, Basel, Switzerland) with the aim of rapid detection of common pathogens in prosthetic joint infections (PJI), followed by validation on clinical samples (sonication fluid and tissue biopsies) routinely collected for PJI diagnosis. Methods. Using the PrimerQuest and CLC WorkBench tool, we designed six primer sets with specific fluorescently labelled TaqMan probes for the nuc gene in different Staphylococcus species (S. aureus, S. epidermidis, S. capitis, S. lugdunensis, S. hominis, S. haemolyticus). In addition, primers previously developed by Renz et al. (2022) for C. acnes were integrated into our assay with internal control of isolation, leading to the development of specific mPCR assay with seven included targets. Analytical sensitivity and specificity were evaluated using reference bacterial strains. To determine the assay's limit of detection (LOD), we conducted serial dilutions of eluates containing known concentrations of bacterial DNA copies/µl. The overall LOD in spiked clinical samples, including sample preparation and DNA isolation on MagnaPure24, was measured through 10-fold serial dilutions (from 10. 9. to 10. -1. CFU/ml) including additional dilutions of 5000, 500, 50 and 5 CFU/ml. Results. The results with LOD in serial dilutions of eluates and spiked clinical samples, together with analytical sensitivity and specificity, are shown in Table 1. Conclusion. The mPCR assay showed excellent analytical sensitivity and specificity, but with considerably lower LOD after sample preparation and further DNA isolation in spiked clinical samples. Although still promising in diagnostics of acute infections, the use of mPCR could be challenging in chronic, low-grade infections with lower microbial burden. Nevertheless, PCR offers significant advantages in terms of speed and can shorten the time to result, especially for C. acnes infections. Additionally, it represents a promising complementary approach in patients with suspected PJI on
Aim. This retrospective study evaluated the outcome of treatment for unhealed fracture-related infections (FRI). Methods. We identified a consecutive, single-centre cohort of patients having treatment for an FRI Consensus confirmed FRI. All fractures were unhealed at the time of treatment. Patients were followed up for at least one year. Successful outcome was a healed fracture without recurrent infection. Lack of union, persistent infection and/or unplanned reoperation defined failure. Results. Demographics: 183 patients (184 FRIs) with mean age 52.1 years (range 17-96) were treated and followed up for a mean of 2.8 years (range 1-9.4). Mean duration of FRI was 1.1 years with 65 (35.5 %) presenting within 6 months of injury. 118 patients had established infected non-union. FRI was most frequent in the tibia (74), femur (48) and humerus (24). 171 patients were BACH Complex. 75.5% of FRIs were culture positive, with Staph. aureus being the most frequent organism. Polymicrobial infection and Gram negative cultures were common (25.5% and 33.6%). Treatment: 98.3% of surgeries were performed in one stage with just 3 planned 2-stage procedures (2 endoprosthetic replacements and 1 free fibular flap). No bone graft was used in any surgery and all wounds were closed at first operation. 48 cases (26%) required flap coverage (29 free flaps and 19 local flaps). Local
Abstract. Background. The aim of the present experimental study was to analyse vancomycin elution kinetics of nine bone fillers used in orthopaedic and trauma surgery over 42 consecutive days. Methods. Two allograft bone chips (carriers 1 and 2), a calcium-sulfate matrix (carrier 3), a hydroxyapatite/calcium-sulphate composite (carrier 4), four bone cements (carriers 5-8) and a pure tricalcium phosphate matrix (carrier 9), either already contained vancomycin, or were mixed with it following manufacturer's recommendations. Over 42 days, half of elution medium was substituted by the same amount of PBS at 9 distinct time points. Vancomycin concentration in obtained samples were measured with a kinetic microparticle immunoassay, and masses consecutively calculated. To enhance comparability between carriers analysed, vancomycin mass released related to overall mass within each probe was determined. Notably, elution kinetics of carriers 1 to 4 have been published previously. Results. All carriers initially released high vancomycin masses, followed by constant reduction later into the experiment. Mean initial vancomycin masses released after 4 hours were highest for carriers 1 (337.7 ± 76.2 mg), 9 (68.4 ± 4.9 mg), and 2 (49.0 ± 54.6 mg). From prefinal (35 days) to last measurement (42 days) carriers 2 (8.6 ± 4.8 mg), 1 (2.4 ± 1.0 mg), and 5 (0.1 ± 0.1 mg) had released highest vancomycin masses. Notably, all five bone cements tested only released a small percental amount of their total mass up to the last measurement (42 days; 2.1% – 9.3%), whilst allografts and resorbable synthetic bone fillers discarded high percental values (22.5% – 79.2%). Conclusions. Elution kinetics differ between 9 antibiotic-loaded bone fillers, with high vancomycin masses released by allografts and resorbable bone fillers over time. Transferred to clinical practice, these may be favoured over bone cements in case prolonged and high
Aim. The SOLARIO trial is a randomised controlled non-inferiority trial of
Aim. Periprosthetic Joint Infection (PJI) is a devastating complication in hip and knee joint arthroplasty. The “JS BACH” classification system was developed in 2021 to stratify the complexity of PJI, and more importantly, to act as a tool to guide referrals to specialist centers. The “JS BACH” classification has not been validated in an external cohort. This study aimed to do so using a large prospective cohort from Australia and New Zealand. Method. We applied the JS-BACH classification to the Prosthetic Joint Infection in Australia and New Zealand Observational (PIANO) cohort. This prospective study of newly diagnosed PJI collected 2-year outcome data from 653 participants enrolled in 27 hospitals. The definition of PJI treatment failure at 24 months was any of the following: death, clinical or microbiological signs of infection, destination prosthesis removed, or ongoing
Aim. Suppressive antimicrobial therapy (SAT) is used worldwide for patients with a prosthetic joint infection (PJI but clear definitions or guidelines regarding the indications, antimicrobial strategy or treatment duration are currently lacking in the literature. The aim of this study was to identify the global differences in the clinical practice of SAT for PJI. Method. An online survey was designed to investigate the current opinion on indication and treatment goals, preferred antimicrobial drugs, dosing and treatment duration and follow-up of patients with PJI on suppression. The survey was distributed using e-mail lists of several international bone and joint infection societies and study groups. Recipients were asked to share the survey with colleagues who were not a member of one of the societies but who were involved in PJI care. Results. The questionnaire was fully completed by 330 physicians from 43 different countries on six continents (Europe, n=134, 41%; Oceania n=112, 34%; North America, n=51, 16%; other, n=33, 10%; total response rate 14%). Antimicrobial treatment for PJI was discussed in a multidisciplinary team in Europe (90%), Oceania (42%) and North America (12%). In six of eight (75%) different clinical scenarios, respondents from North America would most often place a patient on SAT. In seven of eight (88%) scenarios, SAT was started least often by European respondents. The presence of a fistula was considered a contra-indication for suppression by 74 respondents (22%). First choices of SAT for staphylococcal PJI were: oral cephalosporins (39%) and tetracyclines (31%) in North America; anti-staphylococcal penicillins (55%) and oral cephalosporins (24%) in Oceania; tetracyclines (27%) and anti-staphylococcal penicillins (22%) in Europe. For streptococcal PJI, most clinicians preferred penicillins (91% in Oceania, 67% in Europe, and 53% in North America). Preferred SAT for gram negative PJI was: fluoroquinolones and a penicillin/betalactamase inhibitor in North America (26% and 18%, respectively) and Oceania (23% and 27%, respectively); fluoroquinolones (31%) and Cotrimoxazole (28%) in Europe. The dosage of SAT was never lowered (n=126, 38%), standardly lowered for all
Aim. The current recommendation in Norway is to use four doses of a first-generation cephalosporin (cefazolin or cephalotin) as systemic
Aim. The management of PJIs is slowed down by the presence of bacteria forming biofilms where they may withstand
Aim. This is the first study to directly compare the clinical outcome of debridement, antimicrobials and implant retention (DAIR) with stabilization using new internal fixation after debridement, for patients with Fracture-related Infection (FRI). Method. Consecutive patients with FRI Consensus confirmed FRI had single-stage surgery with tissue sampling, debridement, stabilization, antimicrobial therapy and skin closure. All cases had FRIs which were unhealed at surgery. When existing implants were stable, the implant was retained but loose implants or fractures with poor reduction had implant removal and refixation with new implants. All patients had the same empiric and definitive
Introduction. Since the expanded war in Ukraine in 2022, explosives, mines, debris, blast waves, and other factors have predominantly caused injuries during artillery or rocket attacks. These injuries, such as those from shelling shrapnel, involve high-energy penetrating agents, resulting in extensive necrosis and notable characteristics like soft tissue defects and multiple fragmentary fractures with bone tissue defects and a high rate of infection complications caused by multi resistant gram-negative (MRGN) pathogens. Material and Methods. We conducted a prospective study at our center between March 2022 and December 2023. Out of the 56 patients from Ukraine, 21 met the inclusion criteria who had severe war injuries were included in the study. Each of these patients presented with multiple injuries to both bones and soft tissues, having initially undergone treatment in Ukraine involving multiple surgeries. The diagnosis of infection was established based on the EBJIS criteria. Prior to our treatment patients had undergone multiple revision surgeries, including debridement, biopsies, implant and fixator replacement. Additionally, soft tissue management required previously VAC therapy and flap reconstruction for successful treatment. Results. All 21 infections manifested as bone infections (11; 52%), followed by implant-associated infections (5; 24%), soft tissue infections (4; 19%), and septic arthritis (1; 5%). In all patients, the infection was polymicrobial, caused by 3- and 4-MRGN pathogens, as Klebsiella pneumonia 4MRGN, Proteus mirabilis 4MRGN, Enterobacter cloacae 4MRGN etc. Upon admission, all patients carried a diagnosis and exhibited signs indicative of chronic infection. 19 (90.5%) patients required complex
Aims. Bone and joint infections cause significant morbidity, often requiring combination medical and surgical treatment. The presence of foreign material reduces the number of organisms required to cause an infection. The aim of this study was to assess whether there was a difference in the species of organism identified on culture in osteomyelitis compared to prosthetic joint infection. Method. This was a retrospective observational cohort study of patients that had surgical intervention for prosthetic joint infection or osteomyelitis with positive microbial culture between 2019 and 2022. Data including patient demographics, site of injury, BACH score for osteomyelitis and JS-BACH score for prosthetic joint infection, organism classification and
Aim. Decubitus ulcers are found in approximately 4.7% of hospitalized patients, with a higher prevalence (up to 30%) among those with spinal cord injuries. These ulcers are often associated with hip septic arthritis and/or osteomyelitis involving the femur. Girdlestone resection arthroplasty is a surgical technique used to remove affected proximal femur and acetabular tissues, resulting in a substantial defect. The vastus lateralis flap has been employed as an effective option for managing this dead space. The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term outcomes of this procedure in a consecutive series of patients. Method. A retrospective single-center study was conducted from October 2012 to December 2022, involving 7 patients with spinal cord injuries affected by chronic severe septic hip arthritis and/or femoral head septic necrosis as a consequence of decubitus ulcers over trochanter area. All patients underwent treatment using a multidisciplinary approach by the same surgical team (orthopedic and plastic surgeons) along with infectious disease specialists. The treatment consisted of a one-stage procedure combining Girdlestone resection arthroplasty with unilateral vastus lateralis flap reconstruction, alongside targeted
Aim. The primary objective is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of inoculating homogenized tissue and bone biopsies in blood culture bottles (BCB) for patients with (suspected) orthopaedic device-related infections. As secondary objective the time to positivity (TTP) of BCB and Wilkins-Chalgren broth (conventional method) will be evaluated. Method. Patients undergoing revision surgery due to suspected or proven fracture-related infection (FRI) or periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) according to respectively Consensus definition and EBJIS definition are included. 1,2. A minimal of three macroscopic infected/inflamed tissue/bone samples are collected in a container with saline and glass beads. 1.5 mL of the homogenized suspension is inoculated in BacT/ALERT FA and FN Plus bottles for 14 days. The remaining suspension is inoculated in Wilkins-Chalgren broth for 10 days and subcultured when cloudy or after 10 days. TTP is defined as the time until definite identification of the pathogen in the Laboratory Information System. Results. Up to now, 25 patients have been included, 11 (44%) had concordant results in BCB and the CM. In 11 patients cultures showed negative results for both methods. Three patients tested positive with BCB but remained negative with the same pathogen in CM. In the first patient, the CM failed to identify anaerobic bacteria (i.e. Fusobacterium nucleatum). In the second patient, three BCB were positive with Staphylococcus capitis. The third patient showed an infection with Escherichia coli, which was detected in all samples from the BCB, while all cultures obtained with the CM remained negative. A possible explanation for this discrepancy could be that this patient already received
Aim. Periprosthetic joint infections follow 1-3% of arthroplasty surgeries, with the biofilm nature of these infections presenting a significant treatment challenge. 1. Prevention strategies include antibiotic-loaded bone cement; however, increases in cementless procedures means there is an urgent need for alternative local antimicrobial delivery methods. 2. A novel, ultrathin, silica-based sol-gel technology is evaluated in this research as an anti-infective coating for orthopaedic prosthetic devices, providing local