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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 17 - 17
22 Nov 2024
Pedemonte G Reynaga E López V de los Rios JD Molinos S Larraza AV Hermoso JAH
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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 antibiotic and surgical treatment strategies


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 83 - 83
22 Nov 2024
Dudareva M Lama S Miyazaki K Scarborough C Wijendra A Tissingh E Kumin M Scarborough M McNally M
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Aim. The SOLARIO trial is a randomised controlled non-inferiority trial of antibiotic strategy for bone and joint infection. SOLARIO compares short or long post-operative systemic antibiotic duration, for patients with confirmed infections, who had local antibiotics implanted and no infected metalwork retained when undergoing surgery. This analysis compared systemic antibiotic use in the short (intervention) and long (standard of care) arms of the trial, in the 12 months after index surgery. Method. Data was collected prospectively from study randomisation, within 7 days of index surgery. All systemic antibiotics prescribed for the index infection were recorded, from health records and patient recall, at randomisation, 6 weeks, 3-6 months and 12 months after study entry. Start and end dates for each antibiotic were recorded. Results. 251 patients were randomised to short systemic antibiotics (up to 7 post-operative days) and 249 patients, to long systemic antibiotics. 5 participants in the short group and 2 participants in the long group withdrew from study follow-up. Complete data for all systemic antibiotics taken in the 12 months following surgery, were available for 237 participants in the short group and 236 participants in the long group. 80 participants across both groups were noted as having deviated from their assigned treatment strategy. Both groups received empiric antibiotics, predominantly vancomycin and meropenem, for up to 7 days after surgery. Considering each prescribed antibiotic as a separate duration (even when administered concurrently), participants assigned to standard care received a mean of 74.9 antibiotic-days. Participants assigned to short systemic antibiotics received a mean of 27.5 antibiotic-days in the 12 months after surgery. The most commonly prescribed antibiotics in both treatment groups were vancomycin and meropenem: these antibiotics accounted for 7.1 days prescribed per participant in the long group, and 6.3 days in the short group (p=0.37). Reasons for post-randomisation antibiotic prescribing in the short treatment group included later planned surgery, identification of bacteria requiring additional systemic antibiotics, and treatment of superficial wound infections. WHO AWaRe classification ‘watch’ and ‘reserve’ group antibiotics, such as ciprofloxacin, rifampicin, vancomycin and meropenem, accounted for 39.4 antibiotic-days per long group participant, and 16.5 antibiotic-days per short group participant. Conclusions. Considering the combined duration of all systemic antibiotics prescribed over 12 months, including those co-administered, participants in the short arm of the SOLARIO trial received considerably fewer days of all antibiotic classes, and particularly those antibiotics restricted in the WHO AWaRe classification (2021)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 2 - 2
22 Nov 2024
Roskar S Faganeli N Mihalic R Trebse R
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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. antibiotics, followed by oral antibiofilm antibiotics for 6 weeks including rifampicin and/or a quinolone. All patients were followed for at least 1 year. Failure was defined as the need for additional revision surgery after finished iv. antibiotic treatment. Results. Among 48 patients, 38 were early and 10 were late acute or chronic infections. The incidence of infection for our cohort was 0.7%. We observed 27 infections after ligament reconstruction of the knee, 15 of the shoulder, 5 of the ankle, and 1 infection of the elbow joint. 40 patients were treated with DAIR, 5 with OSE, and 3 with implant removal. We had 11 C. acnes, 10 S. aureus, 6 S. epidermidis, 2 P. aeruginosa, 2 S. lugdunensis, 10 mixed flora, and 3 culture-negative infections. 12 patients received antibiotics before surgery, and all culture-negative infections were related to this subgroup. We observed 2 failures, both in a combination of proximal tibial osteotomy and ligament reconstruction of the knee joint. The success rate of our protocol was 96%. Conclusions. Prompt surgical treatment followed by 6 weeks of antibiotic treatment cured 96% of infections of small implants after reconstruction procedures of knee, shoulder, and ankle joints. Our study is the first to provide a treatment protocol for infections of small implants after ligament reconstruction procedures


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 11 - 11
22 Nov 2024
Taltavull RO Goma-Camps MV Calderer LC Amat C Corona P
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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 antibiotics after 1 year. Principio del formularioFinal del formulario. Method. This single-center, randomized controlled trial will involve patients with acute periprosthetic infections undergoing standard DAIR surgery, divided into two groups: one receiving saline solution and the other receiving pre-formulated solution. 1. The study is single-blinded, with patients unaware of their group assignment. The study is registered at ISRCTN: https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN10873696. Inclusion criteria include patients over 18 with hip or knee prostheses suffering from acute or hematogenous periprosthetic infections, while exclusion criteria include a history of prior debridement or multiple infected implants, among others. Principio del formularioFinal del formulario A total of 50 subjects are needed for statistical significance, with a 5% dropout rate anticipated. An interim safety analysis will assess early effectiveness and adverse effects, and the results are presented in this study. Data will be managed in online databases and analyzed using SPSS software, with a significance level of p<0.05. Results. Twenty-four patients were eligible for analysis, twelve in each group. The overall average age was 75 years, and the gender distribution was predominantly female (9 F and 3 M in each group). No significant differences were found at the baseline characteristics level between the two groups (p>0.05). The minimum follow-up of 1 year was achieved in all cases except three due to deaths not related to periprosthetic infection. Regarding efficacy, a non-statistically significant difference was observed (p>0.05), with 58% in the serum group and 42% in the pre-formulated irrigation solution. 1. group (X. 2. = 0.17, p=0.683). The average hospital stay was 38.42 days (SD 26.32) in the pre-formulated irrigation solution group. 1. and 24.42 days (SD 18.72) in the serum group, with this difference being not significant (t=1.5, p=0.148). Conclusions. While the current analysis indicates no significant differences between both groups in terms of efficacy, the study's ongoing progress and the inclusion of a larger sample size could potentially yield more definitive results


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 10 - 10
22 Nov 2024
Frank F Hotchen A Valand P Stubbs D Ferguson J McNally M
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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 antibiotics were used in 124 cases (67.4%) of primary surgeries. All patients had sampling, debridement, systemic antibiotics and wound closure. 40 (21.7%) had DAIR, 31 (16.8%) had new internal fixation and 105 (57.1%) had external fixation (including 79 Ilizarov fixators). Outcomes: After primary surgery, 84.6% of all patients were infection-free and 77.2% had united. After further surgery, 98.8% were infection-free and 98.1% had united. External fixation techniques achieved infection eradication in 89.1% compared to 71.7% with any internal fixation (p=0.005). Primary internal fixation achieved union in 81.7% compared to 74.3% with external fixation (p=0.27). Secondary surgery after external fixation was mainly docking site fixation. Conclusion. Unhealed FRIs present a difficult challenge for treatment. This large series demonstrated that single-stage treatment, without bone grafting, gave acceptable results with few reoperations. Primary external fixation gave more certainty of infection eradication but required more reoperations to secure union. However, this difference in reoperation was not statistically significant. We strongly advocate managing these patients with a multidisciplinary team which can treat all aspects of the condition


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 13, Issue 11 | Pages 673 - 681
22 Nov 2024
Yue C Xue Z Cheng Y Sun C Liu Y Xu B Guo J

Aims

Pain is the most frequent complaint associated with osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH), but the factors contributing to such pain are poorly understood. This study explored diverse demographic, clinical, radiological, psychological, and neurophysiological factors for their potential contribution to pain in patients with ONFH.

Methods

This cross-sectional study was carried out according to the “STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology” statement. Data on 19 variables were collected at a single timepoint from 250 patients with ONFH who were treated at our medical centre between July and December 2023 using validated instruments or, in the case of hip pain, a numerical rating scale. Factors associated with pain severity were identified using hierarchical multifactor linear regression.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 1 - 1
22 Nov 2024
McNally M Frank F Hotchen A Valand P Stubbs D Ferguson J
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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 antibiotics, the same diagnostic criteria and outcome assessment at least one year after surgery. Failure was defined as infection recurrence, reoperation or lack of fracture consolidation at one year. Results. Seventy-one patients were studied (40 DAIRs and 31 new implants, including 10 exchange nails). The two groups were well matched for age, duration of infection, BACH complexity, microbiology, bone involved and need for flap coverage. Ten patients (13.7%) died before the endpoint. Mortality was similar in both groups (DAIR 14.1% vs New Metalware 12.9%; p=0.801) but DAIR of IM nails had a higher mortality at 40% (p=0.011). Sixty-one patients were followed-up for a mean of 3.32 years (1.04-9.43). Infection was eradicated in 23/34 (67.6%) DAIR patients and 24/27 (88.9%) with new metalware (p=0.049). Overall rates of infection-free union were similar in both groups (58.8% vs 77.8%; p=0.117). DAIR of plates had significantly fewer infection-free unions compared to removal and implantation of new plates (DAIR 57.1% vs NM 91.7%; p=0.033). Conclusion. Implantation of new metalware had better eradication of infection and a strong trend towards better union rates. Treating FRI with retained or new metalware had a substantial mortality (13.7%). Choosing DAIR did not reduce this mortality and these patients more often required further surgery to treat residual infection and secure union


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 4 - 4
22 Nov 2024
Pidgaiska O Goumenos S Dos Santos MV Trampuz A Stöckle U Meller S
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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 antibiotic regimens combined with multiple wound revisions and debridements, changes of fixators and combination of systemic and local antibiotic therapy. In 6 patients (28%) high dosages of local antibiotics such as gentamycin, vancomycin and meropenem were incorporated into a carrier of bio-absorbable calcium sulfate, calcium sulfate/hydroxyapatite which were introduced into the hip joint, femoral canal or bone defect for dead space management during the surgery. When local antibiotics were administered at intervals, the microbiology results at implantation showed negative results. 2 (9%) patients had new infections (different site, different pathogens), 1 (4.8%) is still under the treatment. In 17 (81%) patients infection complications were treated successfully with no recurrence of infection. Conclusion. War injuries result in complex bone and soft-tissue infections caused by 3-, 4-MRGN pathogens. Addressing this challenge necessitates multidisciplinary approach with multiple, thorough surgical debridements, effective local, and systemic antimicrobial therapy. As for the outlook we can see potential in local antibiotic carriers


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 antibiotic therapy. Complications and postoperative outcomes were assessed and recorded. The mean follow-up period was 8 years (range 2-12). Results. Of the 7 patients, 5 were male and 2 were female, with a mean age of 50.3 years at the time of surgery. Minor wound dehiscence occurred in 28.6% of the flap sites, and 2 patients required additional revisional procedures—one for hematoma and the other for bleeding. There were no instances of flap failure, and complete wound healing was achieved in an average of 32 days (range 20-41), with the ability to load over the hip area. No cases of infection recurrence or relapse were observed. Conclusions. An aggressive surgical approach is strongly recommended for managing chronic hip septic arthritis or proximal femur osteomyelitis in patients with spinal cord injuries. A single-stage procedure combining Girdlestone resection arthroplasty with immediate vastus lateralis muscle flap reconstruction proves to be an effective strategy for dead space management and localized antibiotic delivery through the vastus muscle, giving reliable soft tissue coverage around the proximal femur to avoid the recurrence of pressure ulcers. The implementation of a standardized multidisciplinary protocol contributes significantly to the success of reconstruction efforts


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 81 - 81
22 Nov 2024
de Waard G Veltman W van Oldenrijk J Bos K Koch B
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Aim. Prosthetic joint infections (PJI) are a common reason for revisions in patients that underwent total arthroplasty of the hip (THA) or knee (TKA). Extensive antibiotic treatment follows while a clear understanding of target site concentrations is lacking. The aim is to investigate the target site concentrations, like bone and synovial tissue concentrations, which consequently may lead to an optimisation of the dosing regiments of cefuroxime of PJI patients suffering from pain and immobility. Dosing optimisation may lead to a reduced risk of (re-)infection and adverse effects like renal-insufficiency and therefore lower health-care costs. Method. Patients (n=26) with PJI of hip or knee undergoing a one- or two-stage revision treated with cefuroxime were included as part of the ASTERICS study. During implant removal two samples were collected 15-30 and 60-120 minutes after IV infusion of plasma, bone tissue and synovial tissue and one synovial fluid sample. Samples were analysed using a UltraPerformance Convergence Chromotography – quadruple mass spectrometry system (UPC. 2. -MS/MS). Bone tissue and synovial tissue were pulverized before analysis acquiring for bone tissue a homogenate of cortical and cancellous bone. Using nonlinear mixed effect modelling (NONMEM) a base model was developed to analyse the bone to plasma ratio of cefuroxime in osteomyelitis patients. Results. Mean bone concentrations (mg/L) of cefuroxime at 30-60 min after IV administration in the knee and hip are 21.29 (SD:11.86) and 19.06 (SD: 11.79) respectively and 8.23 (SD:4.90) and 9.67 (SD:9.75) respectively at 90-120 min after IV administration. The penetration of cefuroxime described by the bone:plasma ratio into knee and hip affected by osteomyelitis is 0.3 and 0.4 respectively within 1 hour and 0.1 for both joints within 2 hours. The results mentioned here were collected during knee operations without blood void conditions. Concentration data was used to develop a base pharmacokinetic model using NONMEM and was best described by a two-compartment model. Conclusions. Cefuroxime penetrates osteomyelitis affected bone tissue within the hour proving the usefulness of cefuroxime as prophylaxis of orthopaedic surgery and as treatment option for PJI. However, PK modelling and further simulations need to prove whether repeated cefuroxime dosing in this population is required to reach minimal inhibitory concentrations in target tissue


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 50 - 50
22 Nov 2024
Hvistendahl MA Bue M Hanberg P Tøstesen S Vittrup S Stilling M Høy K
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Aim. Antibiotic prophylaxis is central in preventing postoperative spine infections, yet knowledge of clinical spine tissue antibiotic concentrations remains limited. Pooled postoperative spine infection rates are constant (approximately 3%), resulting in severe patient morbidity, mortality, and prolonged hospitalization. Current antibiotic dosing regimens often involve fixed doses based on empirical knowledge, surrogate measures (plasma samples), non-clinical evidence (experimental models), and inferior methodology (tissue specimens). Therefore, personalized antibiotic dosing may be the future of antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent postoperative infections, especially implant infections. The aim was to continuously evaluate intra- and postoperative cefuroxime target spine tissue concentrations in long-lasting spine surgery after personalized dosing by repeated weight-dosed intravenous administrations. Method. Twenty patients (15 female, 5 male) scheduled for long-lasting spine deformity surgery with hypotensive anaesthesia were included; median age (range): 17.5 years (12-74), mean BMI (range): 22.2 (16.2-37.7), and mean surgery time (range): 4h 49min (3h 57min-6h 9min). Weight-dosed cefuroxime (20 mg/kg) was administered intravenously to all patients on average 25 min before incision and repeated after 4 hours. Microdialysis catheters were placed for sampling of cefuroxime concentrations in vertebral bone (only intraoperative sampling), paravertebral muscle, and subcutaneous tissue as soon as possible after surgery start. Upon wound closure, two additional catheters were placed in the profound and superficial part of the wound. Microdialysis and plasma samples were obtained continuously intra- and postoperative for up to 12 hours. The primary endpoint was (based on cefuroxime time-dependent efficacy) the time with cefuroxime concentrations above the clinical breakpoint minimal inhibitory concentration for Staphylococcus aureus of 4 µg/mL in percentage (%fT>MIC4) of. (a). patients’ individual surgery time,. (b). first dosing interval (0-4 hours),. (c). second dosing interval (4-12 hours). Results. Mean cefuroxime %fT>MIC4 (range) of:. (a). patients’ individual surgery time was 100% (100-100%) in all investigated tissues. (b). the first dosing interval was 93% (93-93%) in vertebral bone, paravertebral muscle, subcutaneous tissue, and 99% (99-100%) in plasma. (c). the second dosing interval was 87% (52-100%) in paravertebral muscle, 89% (52-100%) in subcutaneous tissue, 91% (71-100%) in the profound wound, 94% (72-100%) in the superficial wound, and 71% (42-100%) in plasma. Conclusions. Personalized cefuroxime dosing by repeated weight-dosed (20 mg/kg) intravenous administrations provided homogenous and therapeutic spine tissue exposure across all investigated tissues and plasma in long-lasting spine surgery with hypotensive anaesthesia (up to 11 hours). Thus, personalized cefuroxime dosing may decrease the risk of postoperative spine infection, especially in cases with implant insertion


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 28 - 28
22 Nov 2024
Boyce S Nichol T Smith T Le Maitre C
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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 antibiotic release following surgery. Method. Reduction in clinically relevant microbial activity and biofilm reduction by antimicrobial sol-gel coatings, containing a selection of antibiotics, were assessed via disc diffusion and microdilution culture assays using the Calgary biofilm device. 3. Proliferation, morphology, collagen, and calcium production by primary bovine osteoblasts cultured upon antibiotic sol-gel surfaces were examined, and cytotoxicity evaluated using Alamar blue staining and lactate dehydrogenase assays. Concentrations of silica, calcium and phosphorus compounds within the cell layer cultured on sol-gel coatings and concentrations eluted into media, were quantified using ICP-OES. Furthermore, cellular phenotype was assessed using alkaline phosphatase activity with time in culture. Results. Low antibiotic concentrations within sol-gel had an inhibitory effect on clinically relevant biofilm growth, for example 0.8 mg ml. -1. tobramycin inhibited clinically isolated S. aureus (MRSA) growth with an 8-log reduction in viable colony forming units. There was no significant difference in metabolic activity between untreated and sol-gel exposed primary bovine osteoblasts in elution-based assays. Reduction (2-fold) in metabolic activity in direct contact assays after 48 hours exposure was likely to be due to increased osteoinduction, whereas no impact upon cell proliferation were observed (p=0.92 at 14 days culture). The morphology of primary osteoblasts was unaffected by culture on sol-gel coatings and collagen production was maintained. Calcium containing nodule production within bovine osteoblastic cells was increased 16-fold after 14 days culture upon sol-gel. Conclusions. The ultrathin sol-gel coating showed low cytotoxicity, strong biofilm reducing activity and antimicrobial activity, which was comparable to antibiotics alone, demonstrating that sol-gel delivery of antibiotics could provide local antimicrobial effects to inhibit PJI growth without the need for bone cement. Future work will develop and evaluate sol-gel performance in an ex vivo explant bone infection model which will reduce the need for animal experimentation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 32 - 32
22 Nov 2024
Granata V Strina D Possetti V Leone R Valentino S Chiappetta K Bottazzi B Mantovani A Loppini M Asselta R Sobacchi C Inforzato A
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Aim. Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is one of the most serious and frequent complications in prosthetic surgery. Despite significant improvements in the criteria for diagnosis of PJI, the diagnostic workflow remains complex and, sometimes, inconclusive. Host immune factors hold great potential as diagnostic biomarkers in bone and joint infections. We have recently reported that the synovial concentration of the humoral pattern recognition molecule long pentraxin 3 (PTX3) is a sensitive and specific marker of PJI in total hip and knee arthroplasty patients (THA and TKA) undergoing revision surgery [1]. However, the contribution to risk and diagnosis of PJI of the genetic variation in PTX3 and inflammatory genes that are known to affect its expression (IL-1b, IL-6, IL-10, and IL-17A) has not been addressed. Therefore, we assessed these relationships in a cohort of THA and TKA patients who underwent prosthesis revision by focusing on a panel of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the PTX3, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10 and IL-17A genes. Method. A case-control retrospective study was conducted on an historic cohort of patients that received THA or TKA revision and were diagnosed with PJI (cases) or aseptic complications (controls) [1]. Samples of saliva were collected from 93 subjects and used for extraction of genomic DNA to perform genotyping of the PTX3, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10 and IL-17A polymorphisms. Moreover, whenever available, samples of synovial fluid and plasma [1] were used to measure the concentration of the IL-1β, IL-10, and IL-6 proteins by immunoassay. Uni-and multivariate analyses were performed to evaluate the relationships between genetic, biochemical, and clinical variables. Results. The rs3024491 (IL-10) and rs2853550 (IL-1b) SNPs were found to be strongly associated with the risk of PJI. The synovial levels of PTX3, IL-1β, IL-10, and IL-6 were higher in cases than in controls, and a clear correlation emerged between the synovial concentration of PTX3 and IL-1b in cases only. Also, we identified a causal relationship between rs2853550, synovial concentration of IL-1b and that of PTX3 (that is induced by IL-1b). Conclusions. Our findings suggest that SNPs in the IL-10 and IL-1b genes could be used for early identification of THA and TKA patients with high risk of PJI. It is therefore conceivable that integrating genetic data into current diagnostic criteria would improve diagnosis of PJI


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 29 - 29
22 Nov 2024
Trebše N Blas M Kanalec T Angelini K Filipič T Levašic V Trebse R
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Aim. There is limited data on the frequency and impact of untoward events such as glove perforation, contamination of the surgical field (drape perforation, laceration, detachment), the unsterile object in the surgical field (hair, sweat droplet…), defecation, elevated air temperature…that may happen in the operating theatre. These events should influence the surgical site infection rate but it is not clear to what extent. We wanted to calculate the frequency and measure the impact of these events on the infection and general revision rate. Method. In our institution, scrub nurses prospectively and diligently record untoward events in the theatres. We have an institutional implant registry with close to 100% data completion since 2001, and surgeons register complications before discharge. We analysed the respective databases and compared the revision and infection rate in the group with untoward events with the outcome of all arthroplasty patients within the same period. Two-tailed Z statistical test was used for analysis. Results. Between 1.1.2012 and 31.12.2018 we operated 13574 prosthetic joints: 6232 primary THR (total hip replacement) and 5466 primary KR (total and partial knee replacement) and 1245 and 631 revisions respectively. During this period, we recorded 372 events (2.74%) including 20 (0.15 %) defecations, 40 (0.29 %) unsterile object in the surgical field, 73 (0.54%) field sterility violations, 45 (0.33 %) glove perforations, 45 (0.33 %) occasions with elevated air temperature, 106 (0.78%) with guests in the OR, 11 (0.08%) with wound near the surgical field, and 32 (0.24%) with other events. We followed the patients till 1.1.2022, in this time we recorded 27 (7.26%) reoperations in the cohort with untoward events. There were 9 (2.42%) infections and 18 (4.84%) aseptic revisions in the group with unwanted events. The infection rate for all TJR (total joint replacement) from the period 2012-2018, followed till 1.1.2022 was 2.23%, the revision rate for any reason was 4.37%. For all THR (primary and revision) the infection rate was 0.84%, the overall revision rate was 3.18% and for the KR (primary and revision) 1.71% and 5,82% respectively. The difference is significant at p>0.05 for infection rate. Conclusions. The potentially serious sterility disruptive events in the operative rooms did result in an increased infection rate but not an increase in revision rate. There is no data about the rate and the impact of these events besides for perforated surgical gloves with higher reported incidences than in our study influencing infection rate if perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis was not used. Ours is the first study reporting the impact of these unwanted events in the operating theatre. Key words. orthopaedic surgery, unwanted events, revision rate


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 78 - 78
22 Nov 2024
Lutro O Tjørhom MB Fenstad AM Leta TH Hallan G Bruun T Furnes O Gjertsen J Dale H
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Aim. The current recommendation in Norway is to use four doses of a first-generation cephalosporin (cefazolin or cephalotin) as systemic antibiotic prophylaxis (SAP) the day of surgery in primary joint arthroplasty. Due to shortage of supply, scientific development, changed courses of treatment and improved antibiotic stewardship, this recommendation has been disputed. We therefore wanted to assess if one dose of SAP was non-inferior to four doses in preventing periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in primary joint arthroplasty. Method. We included patients with primary hip- and knee arthroplasties from the Norwegian Arthroplasty Register and the Norwegian Hip Fracture Register for the period 2005-2023. We included the most used SAPs (cephalotin, cefazolin, cefuroxime, cloxacillin and clindamycin), administered as the only SAP in 1-4 doses, starting preoperatively. Risk of revision (Hazard rate ratio; HRR) for PJI was estimated by Cox regression analyses with adjustment for sex, age, ASA class, duration of surgery, reason for- and type of arthroplasty, and year of primary arthroplasty. The outcome was 1-year reoperation or revision for PJI. Non-inferiority margins were calculated for 1, 2 and 3 doses versus reference of 4 doses of SAP at the day of surgery, against a predetermined limit of 15% increased risk of PJI. Results. In total 274,188 primary arthroplasties (total hip 133,985, hemi hip 51,442, and total knee 88,761) were included. Of these primary arthroplasties, 2,996 (1.1%) had subsequent revisions for PJI during the first postoperative year. One dose of SAP was given in 9,603 arthroplasties, two doses in 10,068, three doses in 18,351, and four doses in 236,166 arthroplasties. With the recommended four doses as reference, the HRR (95% CI) for 1-year revision for infection was 0.9 (0.7-1.1) for one dose, 1.0 (0.8-1.2) for two doses, and 0.9 (0.8-1.1) for three doses. The corresponding adjusted 1-year revision incidences for PJI was 0.9 (0.7-1.1), 1.0 (0.8-1.2), 0.9 (0. 8-1.1) and 1.0 (1.0-1.1) for one, two, three and four doses respectively, and less than four doses was found to be non-inferior. Conclusions. One preoperative dose of SAP in primary joint arthroplasty surgery seems to be non-inferior to the current recommendation of four doses of a first-generation cephalosporin as PJI-prophylaxis. This finding may simplify the course of treatment for arthroplasty patients, save costs, and improve antibiotic stewardship


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 86 - 86
22 Nov 2024
Lentini A Djoko J Putineanu D Tribak K Coyette M Yombi J Cornu O
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Aim. Bone infections often manifest with soft tissue complications such as severe scarring, fistulas, or ulcerations. Ideally, their management involves thorough debridement of infected bone and associated soft tissues, along with achieving stable bone structure, substantial tissue coverage, and long-term antibiotic therapy. The formation of a multidisciplinary team comprising orthopedic surgeons, plastic surgeons, and infectious disease specialists is essential in addressing the most complex cases. Method. We conducted a retrospective study during six years (2018-2023) at our university center. Focusing on the most challenging cases, we included patients with bone infections in the leg and/or foot requiring free flap reconstruction. Each patient underwent simultaneous bone debridement and reconstruction by the orthopedic team, alongside soft tissue debridement and free flap reconstruction by the plastic surgery team. Targeted antibiotic therapy for either 6 weeks (acute) or 12 weeks (chronic osteitis) was initiated based on intraoperative cultures. Additional procedures such as allografts, arthrodesis, or autografts were performed if necessary. We analyzed the rates of bone union, infection resolution, and limb preservation. Results. Forty-five patients were enrolled. Twenty-four patients (53.3%) had urgent indications (e.g., open infected fractures, osteitis, acute osteoarthritis, or wound dehiscence), while 21 (46.7%) underwent elective surgery (e.g., septic pseudarthrosis or chronic osteitis). Two patients underwent amputation due to flap failure (4.4%), and one patient was lost to follow-up. Follow-up of the remaining 42 patients averaged 28 months (range: 6–60 months). During this period, 35 patients (83.4%) experienced no recurrence of infection. Similarly, 35 patients (83.4%) achieved bone union. Overall, the rate of lower limb preservation was 93.3%. Conclusions. Managing bone infection coupled with soft tissue defects brings significant challenges. Although the majority of patients treated here belong to a complex framework based on the BACH classification, the outcomes achieved here appear to align with those of the simpler cases, thanks to optimal care with a dedicated septic ortho-plastic team. Our study demonstrates a notable success rate in treating infection, achieving bone consolidation, and preserving lower limb function


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 53 - 53
22 Nov 2024
Wallander K Beijer G Eliasson E Giske C Ponzer S Söderquist B Eriksen J
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Aim. Swedish guidelines on antibiotic prophylaxis in arthroplasty surgery recommend cloxacillin in fixed doses that pay little attention to the patient's renal function and weight. Nevertheless, there are no studies on whether the resulting free prophylactic cloxacillin in vivo concentrations are optimal. We aimed to evaluate whether the current recommended prophylactic dosage of cloxacillin is adequate. Method. We performed a prospective two-centre study, measuring the free (active) cloxacillin concentrations in plasma throughout surgery, in patients subject to primary hip and knee prosthetic joint replacements, aiming at 100 patients per centre. To account for plasma-bone exposure differences, concentrations were considered adequate if twice the epidemiological cut-off value for cloxacillin concerning wild type Staphylococcus aureus whereas two-three times were labelled threshold values. The two enrolling hospitals are acute care hospitals in central Sweden, also performing 600 - 1200 primary hip and knee joint arthroplasties annually. All patients scheduled for elective primary hip or knee replacements from January 2022 to April 2024 were eligible for participation. Exclusion criteria were allergy towards penicillins, cognitive disorders leading to inability to sign informed consent, and an absence of interpreter in case of a patient not speaking Swedish or English. Results. We present results from the first 49 patients included. Four patients had free cloxacillin concentrations below cut-off (8.2%). These four cases had prolonged surgeries of 77-100 minutes. An additional 5/49 (10.2%) had threshold values. Conversely 5/49 (10.2%) cases had concentrations exceeding 15 times the needed. No cases with threshold or low cloxacillin concentrations were attributable to a lack of concerning timing and dosing of cloxacillin. All concentrations were above or equal to our cut-off at the start of surgery. Eighteen percent of patients were of normal of weight (BMI 18.5- 25). Of the rest 4% were morbidly obese (BMI >40), 41% obese (BMI 30-40) and 37% overweight (BMI 25-30). Twenty seven percent (43/159) had diabetes and 45% suffered cardiac disease. Conclusions. Some patients in our cohort had insufficient active cloxacillin levels at the end of prosthetic joint surgery. Previous studies indicate that insufficient prophylactic antibiotic concentrations might lead to an enhanced risk of prosthetic joint infections. Other patients were massively overdosed, leading to unnecessary ecological effects and potentially adverse reactions. As inadequate cloxacillin concentrations were not associated with a lack of compliance to current guidelines a change in practise might be needed. Our final results may help to determine how dosing should be adjusted


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 6 - 6
22 Nov 2024
Valand P Hotchen A Frank F McNally M Ramsden A
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Aim. To report outcomes of soft tissue reconstruction using free tissue transfer for the treatment of tibial osteomyelitis as part of a single-stage, ortho-plastic procedure. Method. Patients who underwent ortho-plastic reconstructive surgery to excise tibial osteomyelitis in combination with free tissue transfer in one stage were included. Patients underwent surgery between 2015 and 2024 in a single specialist centre within the UK. Baseline patient information, demographics, and infection information was recorded. Adverse outcomes were defined as (i) flap salvage required, (ii) flap failure and (iii) recurrence of infection. Patient reported quality of life was measured using the EuroQol EQ-5D-5L index score. Pre-operative QoL was compared to QoL at 1 year with a control group of 53 similar patients who underwent surgical treatment for tibial osteomyelitis without a free flap (local flap or primary closure). Results. Ninety-three patients were eligible for inclusion, with a mean age of 52 years (range 18–90). 77/93 (82.8%) had a free muscle flap with the remainder (17.2%) receiving a fasciocutaneous flap. The donor tissue was defined as 57 gracilis, 6 latissimus dorsi, 14 hemi-latissimus dorsi, and 16 anterolateral thigh. The recipient area of the tibia was distal 1/3 in 52 cases, middle 1/3 in 27 cases and proximal 1/3 in 12 cases. The average flap ischaemic time was 70 minutes (range 28 to 125). Seven patients (7.5%) required urgent flap salvage at a median time of 1.0 day (range 0.5 – 4.0). Of these, 4 (4.3%) went on to have total flap failure, of which 2 patients underwent below knee amputation subsequently. Flap failure was due to either arterial (n=2) or venous (n=2) anastomotic thrombus. There were 3 (3.2%) episodes of confirmed infection recurrence within the first year after the index procedure. EQ-index scores at 1-year post-operatively were significantly improved when compared to pre-operative scores (p=0.008). At 1-year post-operatively, EQ-index scores in patients who underwent free flap was similar compared to local flaps (p=0.410) and in those who underwent primary closure for tibial osteomyelitis (p=0.070). Conclusions. Microsurgical single stage surgery can achieve high flap survival rate (95.7%). Free flaps fail early due to anastomotic thrombus with no late failures seen. Free tissue transfer does not appear to give inferior QoL compared to matched patients with local flaps or direct closure in tibial osteomyelitis


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 18 - 18
22 Nov 2024
Gupta V Shahban S Petrie M Kimani P Kozdryk J Riemer B King R Westerman R Foguet P
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Aim. Predicting success of a Debridement, Antibiotics and Implant Retention (DAIR) procedure for Periprosthetic Joint Infection (PJI) remains a challenge. A failed DAIR might adversely affect the outcome of any future revision surgery for PJI. Hence, the ability to identify and optimise factors predictive of DAIR success would help target the procedure to the appropriate patient cohort and avoid unnecessary surgery for patients where a DAIR is unlikely to eradicate infection. Method. A retrospective review of our prospective Bone Infection Group database was performed to identify all patients who underwent a DAIR of their hip or knee arthroplasty. Diagnosis of PJI was confirmed using the Musculoskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) 2013 and the European Bone and Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) 2021 classification systems. DAIR surgery was grouped into “successful” or “unsuccessful” outcomes as per the MSIS working group outcome-reporting tool. Results. Sixty-Four consecutive patients with an acute PJI underwent a DAIR procedure between 2009 and 2020. Treatment was successful in 44 (69%). The chance of a successful DAIR was significantly greater if performed within one week of symptom onset compared to greater than one week duration (adjusted odds ratio (OR 0.11; p=0.027; 95% CI [0.02- 0.78]). The chances of a successful DAIR was not influenced by whether the surgeon was an arthroplasty or non-arthroplasty surgeon (OR 0.28; p=0.13; 95% CI [0.05- 1.48]). Isolated Streptococcus infection had a success rate of 100%; followed by Coagulasenegative Staphylococci 71% and Methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus Aureus 65%. Polymicrobial infection had the worst outcome with a success rate of 47%. Conclusions. In our experience DAIR surgery performed within one week of symptom onset, significantly increased chances of successful infection eradication. Collaborative work is required to ensure arthroplasty patients access prompt appropriate surgical decision-making, remove barriers to early assessment and minimise delays to surgery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 34 - 34
22 Nov 2024
Seixas J Altoé LS Santos AC Ribau A Abreu M Carvalho A Pereira F Soares D Sousa R
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Aim. Determine therapeutic and prognostic value of three different prosthetic joint infections (PJI) staging systems – JS-Bach, McPherson and PJI-TNM. Method. Retrospective analysis of patients who received surgery for PJI between 2011 and 2022 at one single institution, including DAIR, 1-stage revision and 2-stage revision. We applied three staging systems - JS-Bach, McPherson, PJI-TNM – and categorize the results into A (less severe), B (intermediate) and C (most severe). Demographic data and comorbidities, anatomic location, type of treatment, recurrency of infection, final outcome and antibiogram were analyzed. Results. 186 patients were included, 112 (60%) were woman. Median age was 70 years old. 51% were submitted to DAIR, 10% to 1-stage revision and 39% to 2-stage revision. Recurrence of infection was found on 27% of patients after initial treatment. 10% died with complication related to PJI. Final status at last follow-up showed 96% of cases were ultimately free of infection at last follow-up. JS-BACH was associated with recurrence. All three staging systems were associated with final outcome. Conclusions. Despite all existing knowledge around risk factors for treatment failure of PJI, there is still a lack of a generally accepted classification system to accurately predict patient outcome. JS-BACH, McPherson and PJI-TNM are three different proposed classifications developed to predict clinical outcomes. To the best of our knowledge there are no studies directly comparing their performance. We retrospectively evaluated our cohort and found that all three correlated with final patient outcome but JS-BACH was the only who significantly correlated with infection recurrence after initial treatment