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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 73 - 73
1 Oct 2022
Zanna L Sangaletti R Akkaya M Gehrke T Citak M
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Aims

Despite numerous studies on periprosthetic joint infections (PJI), there are no robust data on the risk factors and timing of metachronous infections. This study was performed to answer the following questions: 1) Is there any difference of manifestation time of metachronous PJIs between different localizations of multiple artificial joints? 2) Can we identify any specific risk factor for metachronous PJIs for different localizations of multiple artificial joints?

Methods

Between January 2010 and December 2018, 661 patients with more than one prosthetic joint at the time of PJI surgical treatment were recruited. Seventy-one developed metachronous PJI after a mean time interval of 101.4 months (range 37.5 to 161.5 months). The remaining patients were chosen as control group. The diagnosis of the PJI, including the metachronous PJI, was made according to the Muscoloskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) criteria. The metachronous infections were divided in group 1: metachronous infections in the same extremity (e.g. right hip and right knee); group 2: metachronous infections of the other extremity (e.g. right knee and left hip); group 3: metachronous infections of the lower extremity and upper extremity (e.g. right knee and left shoulder).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 34 - 34
1 Dec 2022
Cavazzoni G Cristofolini L Barbanti-Bròdano G Dall'Ara E Palanca M
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Bone metastases radiographically appear as regions with high (i.e. blastic metastases) or low (i.e. lytic metastases) bone mineral density. The clinical assessment of metastatic features is based on computed tomography (CT) but it is still unclear if the actual size of the metastases can be accurately detected from the CT images and if the microstructure in regions surrounding the metastases is altered (Nägele et al., 2004, Calc Tiss Int). This study aims to evaluate (i) the capability of the CT in evaluating the metastases size and (ii) if metastases affect the bone microstructure around them.

Ten spine segments consisted of a vertebra with lytic or mixed metastases and an adjacent control (radiologically healthy) were obtained through an ethically approved donation program. The specimens were scanned with a clinical CT (AquilionOne, Toshiba: slice thickness:1mm, in-plane resolution:0.45mm) to assess clinical metastatic features and a micro-CT (VivaCT80, Scanco, isotropic voxel size:0.039mm) to evaluate the detailed microstructure. The volume of the metastases was measured from both CT and micro-CT images (Palanca et al., 2021, Bone) and compared with a linear regression. The microstructural alteration around the metastases was evaluated in the volume of interest (VOI) defined in the micro-CT images as the volume of the vertebral body excluding the metastases. Three 3D microstructural parameters were calculated in the VOI (CTAn, Bruker SkyScan): Bone Volume Fraction (BV/TV), Trabecular Thickness (Tb.Th.), Trabecular Spacing (Tb.Sp.). Medians of each parameter were compared (Kruskal-Wallis, p=0.05).

One specimen was excluded as it was not possible to define the size of the metastases in the CT scans. A strong correlation between the volume obtained from the CT and micro-CT images was found (R2=0.91, Slope=0.97, Intercept=2.55, RMSE=5.7%, MaxError=13.12%). The differences in BV/TV, Tb.Th. and Tb.Sp. among vertebrae with lytic and mixed metastases and control vertebrae were not statistically significant (p-value>0.6). Similar median values of BV/TV were found in vertebrae with lytic (13.2±2.4%) and mixed (12.8±9.8%) metastases, and in controls (13.0±10.1%). The median Tb.Th. was 176±18 ∓m, 179±43 ∓m and 167±91 ∓m in vertebrae with lytic and mixed metastases and control vertebrae, respectively. The median Tb. Sp. was 846±26 ∓m, 849±286 ∓m and 880±116 ∓m in vertebrae with lytic and mixed metastases and control vertebrae, respectively.

In conclusion, the size of vertebral metastases can be accurately assess using CT images. The 3D microstructural parameters measured were comparable with those reported in the literature for healthy vertebrae (Nägele et al., 2004, Calc Tiss Int, Sone et al., 2004, Bone) and showed how the microstructure of the bone tissue surrounding the lesion is not altered by the metastases.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Jul 2022
Kurien T East J Mandalia V
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Abstract

Introduction

To investigate the impact medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (MOWHTO) has on the progression of patellofemoral OA, patella height and contact pressure within the patellofemoral joint (PF).

Methods

A systematic review was conducted in January 2022 according to PRISMA guidelines. Each study was graded as per the MINORS criteria for non-randomised trials. The ICRS cartilage grade of the PF joint at the initial MOWHTO surgery and at second look surgery was compared and relative risk of progression of PF OA was calculated. Evaluation of patella height was assessed by Caton-Deschamps index, Blackburne-Peel index or Insall-Salvati ratio pre and post MOWHTO. Cadaveric studies assessing contact pressures in the PF after MOWHTO were included.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 33 - 33
1 Oct 2022
Ferry T Kolenda C Briot T Craighero F Conrad A Lustig S Bataillers C Laurent F
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Background

Bacteriophages are natural viruses of interest in the field of PJI. A paper previously reported the PhagoDAIR procedure (use of phages during DAIR) in three patients with PJI for whom explantation was not desirable. As the need to isolate the pathogen before surgery to perform phage susceptibility testing is a strong hindrance for the development of this procedure, we developed post-operative phage injections using ultrasound, in patients infected with S. aureus and/or P. aeruginosa who were eligible for the PhagoDAIR procedure, but for whom phages were not available at the time of surgery.

Materials/Methods

We performed a single center, exploratory, prospective cohort study including patients with knee PJI who received phage therapy with ultrasound after performance of a DAIR or a partial prosthesis exchange. All patients had PJI requiring conservative surgery and suppressive antimicrobial therapy (SAT) as salvage procedure. Each case was discussed in multidisciplinary meetings in agreement with French health authority, based on the clinical presentation, and the phage susceptibility testing. The cocktail of highly concentrate active phages (5 mL; about 10e9 PFU/mL) was extemporaneous prepared and administered three times directly into the joint using sonography (1 injection per week during 3 weeks) during the postoperative period, before switching antibiotics to SAT.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 54 - 54
1 Jul 2022
Jenner L Penfold C
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Abstract

Aims

Whilst short and mid-term activity levels after a Total Knee Replacement (TKR) have been reported in the literature; there is an over simplification of the reporting and longer-term activity levels are unknown. The aim of this study was to map the long-term trajectories of patients’ physical activity levels postoperatively to identify meaningful subgroups and explore associations with preoperative variables.

Methods

This was a secondary analysis of a single centre longitudinal cohortstudy using group-based trajectory modelling (GBTM) of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) physical activity score over ten years.

Multinomial logistic regression models (both adjusted and unadjusted) were used to test associations between preoperative variables and trajectory group membership.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 37 - 37
1 Dec 2022
Contartese D Salamanna F Borsari V Pagani S Sartori M Martini L Brodano GB Gasbarrini A Fini M
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Breast cancer is the most frequent malignancy in women with an estimation of 2.1 million new diagnoses in 2018. Even though primary tumours are usually efficiently removed by surgery, 20–40% of patients will develop metastases in distant organs. Bone is one of the most frequent site of metastases from advanced breast cancer, accounting from 55 to 58% of all metastases. Currently, none of the therapeutic strategies used to manage breast cancer bone metastasis are really curative. Tailoring a suitable model to study and evaluate the disease pathophysiology and novel advanced therapies is one of the major challenges that will predict more effectively and efficiently the clinical response. Preclinical traditional models have been largely used as they can provide standardization and simplicity, moreover, further advancements have been made with 3D cultures, by spheroids and artificial matrices, patient derived xenografts and microfluidics. Despite these models recapitulate numerous aspects of tumour complexity, they do not completely mimic the clinical native microenvironment. Thus, to fulfil this need, in our study we developed a new, advanced and alternative model of human breast cancer bone metastasis as potential biologic assay for cancer research. The study involved breast cancer bone metastasis samples obtained from three female patients undergoing wide spinal decompression and stabilization through a posterior approach. Samples were cultured in a TubeSpin Bioreactor on a rolling apparatus under hypoxic conditions at time 0 and for up to 40 days and evaluated for viability by the Alamar Blue test, gene expression profile, histology and immunohistochemistry. Results showed the maintenance and preservation, at time 0 and after 40 days of culture, of the tissue viability, biological activity, as well as molecular markers, i.e. several key genes involved in the complex interactions between the tumour cells and bone able to drive cancer progression, cancer aggressiveness and metastasis to bone. A good tis sue morphological and microarchitectural preservation with the presence of lacunar osteolysis, fragmented trabeculae locally surrounded by osteoclast cells and malignant cells and an intense infiltration by tumour cells in bone marrow compartment in all examined samples. Histomorphometrical data on the levels of bone resorption and bone apposition parameters remained constant between T0 and T40 for all analysed patients. Additionally, immunohistochemistry showed homogeneous expression and location of CDH1, CDH2, KRT8, KRT18, Ki67, CASP3, ESR1, CD8 and CD68 between T0 and T40, thus further confirming the invasive behaviour of breast cancer cells and indicating the maintaining of the metastatic microenvironment. The novel tissue culture, set-up in this study, has significant advantages in comparison to the pre-existent 3D models: the tumour environment is the same of the clinical scenario, including all cell types as well as the native extracellular matrix; it can be quickly set-up employing only small samples of breast cancer bone metastasis tissue in a simple, ethically correct and cost-effective manner; it bypasses and/or decreases the necessity to use more complex preclinical model, thus reducing the ethical burden following the guiding principles aimed at replacing/reducing/refining (3R) animal use and their suffering for scientific purposes; it can allow the study of the interactions within the breast cancer bone metastasis tissue over a relatively long period of up to 40 days, preserving the tumour morphology and architecture and allowing also the evaluation of different biological factors, parameters and activities. Therefore, the study provides for the first time the feasibility and rationale for the use of a human-derived advanced alternative model for cancer research and testing of drugs and innovative strategies, taking into account patient individual characteristics and specific tumour subtypes so predicting patient specific responses.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 56 - 56
1 Jul 2022
Low J Akhtar MA Walmsley P Hoellwarth J Al-Muderis M Tetsworth K
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Abstract

Introduction

Knee arthrodesis is one of the treatment options for limb salvage of a failed total knee replacement (TKR) when further revisions were contraindicated. The aim of this study is to determine patient outcomes after knee arthrodesis (KA) following a failed TKR.

Methodology

A literature search was conducted for studies published from January 2000 through January 2022 via Medline, Web of Science, Embase and Cochrane databases. Only primary research studies were included with independent extraction of articles by two reviewers. Results were synthesised by narrative review according to PRISMA guidelines, with full tabulation of all included study results.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 59 - 59
1 Dec 2022
Hiemstra LA Bentrim A Kerslake S Lafave M
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The Banff Patellofemoral Instability Instrument 2.0 (BPII 2.0) is a patient-reported disease-specific quality of life (QOL) outcome measure used to assess patients with recurrent lateral patellofemoral instability (LPI) both pre- and post-operatively. The purpose of this study was to compare the BPII 2.0 to four other relevant patient reported outcome measures (PROMs): the Tampa Scale-11 for kinesiophobia (TSK-11), the pain catastrophizing scale (PCS), a general QOL (EQ-5D-5L), and a return to sport index (ACL-RSI). This concurrent validation sought to compare and correlate the BPII 2.0 with these other measures of physical, psychological, and emotional health. The psychological and emotional status of patients can impact recovery and rehabilitation, and therefore a disease-specific PROM may be unable to consistently identify patients who would benefit from interventions encompassing a holistic and person-focused approach in addition to disease-specific treatment.

One hundred and ten patients with recurrent lateral patellofemoral instability (LPI) were assessed at a tertiary orthopaedic practice between January and October 2021. Patients were consented into the study and asked to complete five questionnaires: the BPII 2.0, TSK-11, PCS, EQ-5D-5L, and the ACL-RSI at their initial orthopaedic consultation. Descriptive demographic statistics were collected for all patients. A Pearson's r correlation coefficient was employed to examine the relationships between the five PROMs. These analyses were computed using SPSS 28.0 © (IBM Corporation, 2021).

One hundred and ten patients with a mean age of 25.7 (SD = 9.8) completed the five PROMs. There were 29 males (26.3%) and 81 females (73.6%) involving 50% symptomatic left knees and 50% symptomatic right knees. The mean age of the first dislocation was 15.4 years (SD = 7.3; 1-6) and the mean BMI was 26.5 (SD = 7.3; range = 12.5-52.6) The results of the Pearson's r correlation coefficient demonstrated that the BPII 2.0 was statistically significantly related to all of the assessed PROM's (p

There was significant correlation evident between the BPII 2.0 and the four other PROMs assessed in this study. The BPII 2.0 does not explicitly measure kinesiophobia or pain catastrophizing, however, the significant statistical relationship of the TSK-11 and PCS to the BPII 2.0 suggests that this information is being captured and reflected. The preliminary results of this concurrent validation suggest that the pre-operative data may offer predictive validity. Future research will explore the ability of the BPII 2.0 to predict patient quality of life following surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 57 - 57
1 Jul 2022
Peacock C Fu H Asopa V Clement N Kader D Sochart D
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Abstract

Introduction

The aims of our systematic review were to assess the Nickel sensitising potential of total knee arthroplasty (TKA), explore the relationship between Nickel hypersensitivity and clinical outcomes, and evaluate the utility of skin patch testing pre- and/or post-operatively.

Methodology

A literature search was performed through EMBASE, Medline and PubMed databases. Articles were screened independently by two investigators. Levels of Evidence were assessed using Oxford CEBM criteria and quality was assessed using MINORS and Cochrane risk-of-bias tools.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 40 - 40
1 Dec 2022
Lipreri M Vecchione R Corrado B Avnet S Perut F Baldini N Graziani G
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Vertebral metastases are the most common type of malignant lesions of the spine. Although this tumour is still considered incurable and standard treatments are mainly palliative, the standard approach consists in surgical resection, which results in the formation of bone gaps. Hence, scaffolds, cements and/or implants are needed to fill the bone lacunae.

Here, we propose a novel approach to address spinal metastases recurrence, based on the use of anti-tumour metallic-based nanostructured coatings. Moreover, for the first time, a gradient microfluidic approach is proposed for the screening of nanostructured coatings having anti-tumoral effect, to determine the optimal concentration of the metallic compound that permits selective toxicity towards tumoral cells.

Coatings are based on Zinc as anti-tumour agent, which had been never explored before for treatment of bone metastases.

The customized gradient generating microfluidic chip was designed by Autodesk Inventor and fabricated from a microstructured mould by using replica moulding technique. Microstructured mould were obtained by micro-milling technique. The chip is composed of a system of microfluidic channels generating a gradient of 6 concentrations of drug and a compartment with multiple arrays of cell culture chambers, one for each drug concentration. The device is suitable for dynamic cultures and in-chip biological assays. The formation of a gradient was validated using a methylene blue solution and the cell loading was successful.

Preliminary biological data on 3D dynamic cultures of stromal cells (bone-marrow mesenchymal stem cells) and breast carcinoma cells (MDA-MB-231) were performed in a commercial microfluidic device.

Results showed that Zn eluates had a selective cytotoxic effect for tumoral cells. Indeed, cell migration and cell replication of treated tumoral cells was inhibited. Moreover, the three-dimensionality of the model strongly affected the efficacy of Zn eluates, as 2D preliminary experiments showed a high cytotoxic effect of Zn also for stromal cells, thus confirming that traditional screening tests on 2D cultured cells usually lead to an overestimation of drug efficacy and toxicity.

Based on preliminary data, the customized platform could be considered a major advancement in cancer drug screenings as it also allows the rapid and efficient screening of biomaterials having antitumor effect.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 51 - 51
1 Nov 2022
Jagadeesh N Pammi S Kariya A Sales R
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Abstract

Background

The primary objective of the study is to determine the function outcome and survivorship of patellofemoral replacement. The secondary aim is to find the determinants of successful/poor outcome.

Methods

This retrospective study involved 45 patients who underwent AVON patellofemoral replacement between January 2015 to December 2020 with the minimal follow-up off for 12 months. The functional outcome was measured using Oxford Knee score (OKS), EuroQol five dimension (EQ-5D). IWANO and Kellgren-Lawrence classification was used to analyse radiographs. To identify determinants of outcome, the following subgroups the presence or absence of normal alignment, tibiofemoral arthritis, trochlear dysplasia and previous surgery. Complications and revision rates were also recorded.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 39 - 39
1 Oct 2022
Vargas-Reverón C Soriano A Fernandez-Valencia J Martinez-Pastor JC Morata L Muñoz-Mahamud E
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Aim

Our aim was to evaluate the prevalence and impact of unexpected intraoperative cultures on the outcome of total presumed aseptic knee and hip revision surgery.

Method

Data regarding patients prospectively recruited in our center, who had undergone elective complete hip and knee revision surgery from January 2003 to July 2017 with a preoperative diagnosis of aseptic loosening was retrospectively reviewed. Partial revisions and patients with follow up below 60 months were excluded from the study. The protocol of revision included at least 3 intraoperative cultures. Failure was defined as the need for re-revision due to any-cause at 5 years and/or the need for antibiotic suppressive therapy.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Dec 2022
Hawker G Bohm E Dunbar M Jones CA Ravi B Noseworthy T Woodhouse L Faris P Dick DA Powell J Paul P Marshall D
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With the rising rates, and associated costs, of total knee arthroplasty (TKA), enhanced clarity regarding patient appropriateness for TKA is warranted. Towards addressing this gap, we elucidated in qualitative research that surgeons and osteoarthritis (OA) patients considered TKA need, readiness/willingness, health status, and expectations of TKA most important in determining patient appropriateness for TKA. The current study evaluated the predictive validity of pre-TKA measures of these appropriateness domains for attainment of a good TKA outcome.

This prospective cohort study recruited knee OA patients aged 30+ years referred for TKA at two hip/knee surgery centers in Alberta, Canada. Those receiving primary, unilateral TKA completed questionnaires pre-TKA assessing TKA need (WOMAC-pain, ICOAP-pain, NRS-pain, KOOS-physical function, Perceived Arthritis Coping Efficacy, prior OA treatment), TKA readiness/willingness (Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS), willingness to undergo TKA), health status (PHQ-8, BMI, MSK and non-MSK comorbidities), TKA expectations (HSS KR Expectations survey items) and contextual factors (e.g., age, gender, employment status). One-year post-TKA, we assessed for a ‘good outcome’ (yes/no), defined as improved knee symptoms (OARSI-OMERACT responder criteria) AND overall satisfaction with TKA results. Multiple logistic regression, stepwise variable selection, and best possible subsets regression was used to identify the model with the smallest number of independent variables and greatest discriminant validity for our outcome. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves were generated to compare the discriminative ability of each appropriateness domain based on the ‘area under the ROC curve’ (AUC). Multivariable robust Poisson regression was used to assess the relationship of the variables to achievement of a good outcome.

f 1,275 TKA recipients, 1,053 (82.6%) had complete data for analyses (mean age 66.9 years [SD 8.8]; 58.6% female). Mean WOMAC pain and KOOS-PS scores were 11.5/20 (SD 3.5) and 52.8/100 (SD 17.1), respectively. 78.1% (95% CI 75.4–80.5%) achieved a good outcome. Stepwise variable selection identified optimal discrimination was achieved with 13 variables. The three best 13-variable models included measures of TKA need (WOMAC pain, KOOS-PS), readiness/willingness (PASS, TKA willingness), health status (PHQ-8, troublesome hips, contralateral knee, low back), TKA expectations (the importance of improved psychological well-being, ability to go up stairs, kneel, and participate in recreational activities as TKA outcomes), and patient age. Model discrimination was fair for TKA need (AUC 0.68, 95% CI 0.63-0.72), TKA readiness/willingness (AUC 0.61, 95% CI 0.57-0.65), health status (AUC 0.59, 95% CI 0.54-0.63) and TKA expectations (AUC 0.58, 95% CI 0.54-0.62), but the model with all appropriateness variables had good discrimination (AUC 0.72, 95% CI 0.685-0.76). The likelihood of achieving a good outcome was significantly higher for those with greater knee pain, disability, unacceptable knee symptoms, definite willingness to undergo TKA, less depression who considered improved ability to perform recreational activities or climb stairs ‘very important’ TKA outcomes, and lower in those who considered it important that TKA improve psychological wellbeing or ability to kneel.

Beyond surgical need (OA symptoms) and health status, assessment of patients’ readiness and willingness to undergo, and their expectations for, TKA, should be incorporated into assessment of patient appropriateness for surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Dec 2022
Ghezzi D Baldini N Graziani G Cappelletti M
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Prosthetic joint infections represent complications connected to the implantation of biomedical devices. Bacterial biofilm is one of the main issues causing infections from contaminated orthopaedic prostheses. Biofilm is a structured community of microbial cells that are firmly attached to a surface and have unique metabolic and physiological attributes that induce improved resistance to environmental stresses including toxic compounds like antimicrobial molecules (e.g. antibiotics). Therefore, there is increasing need to develop methods/treatments exerting antibacterial activities not only against planktonic (suspended) cells but also against adherent cells of pathogenic microorganisms forming biofilms. In this context, metal-based coatings with antibacterial activities have been widely investigated and used in the clinical practice. However, traditional coatings exhibit some drawbacks related to the insufficient adhesion to the substrate, scarce uniformity and scarce control over the toxic metal release reducing the biofilm formation prevention efficacy. Additionally, standardized and systematic approaches to test antibacterial activity of newly developed coatings are still missing, while standard microbiological tests (e.g. soft-agar assays) are typically used that are limited in terms of simultaneous conditions that can be tested, potentially leading to scarce reproducibility and reliability of the results.

In this work, we combined the Calgary Biofilm Device (CBD) as a device for high-throughput screening, together with a novel plasma-assisted technique named Ionized Jet Deposition (IJD), to generate and test new generation of nanostructured silver- and zinc-based films as coatings for biomedical devices with antibacterial and antibiofilm properties. During the experiments we tested both planktonic and biofilm growth of four bacterial strains, two gram-positive and two gram-negative bacterial strains, i.e. Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6538P, Enterococcus faecalis DP1122 and Escherichia coli ATCC 8739 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1, respectively. The use of CBD that had the only wells covered with the metal coatings while the biofilm supports (pegs) were not sheltered allowed to selectively define the toxic effect of the metal release (from the coating) against biofilm development in addition to the toxic activity exerted by contact killing mechanism (on biofilms formed on the coating). The results indicated that the antibacterial and antibiofilm effects of the metal coatings was at least partly gram staining dependent. Indeed, Gram negative bacterial strains showed high sensitivity toward silver in both planktonic growth and biofilm formation, whereas zinc coatings provided a significant inhibitory activity against Gram positive bacterial strains. Furthermore, the coatings showed the maximal activity against biofilms directly forming on them, although, Zn coating showed a strong effect against biofilms of gram-positive bacteria also formed on uncoated pegs.

We conclude that the metal-based coatings newly developed and screened in this work are efficient against bacterial growth and adherence opening possible future applications for orthopedic protheses manufacturing.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 38 - 38
1 Dec 2022
Kim J Alraiyes T Sheth U Nam D
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Thoracic hyperkyphosis (TH – Cobb angle >40°) is correlated with rotator cuff arthropathy and associated with anterior tilting and protraction of scapula, impacting the glenoid orientation and the surrounding musculature. Reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (RTSA) is a reliable surgical treatment for patients with rotator cuff arthropathy and recent literature suggests that patients with TH may have comparable range of motion after RTSA. However, there exists no study reporting the possible link between patient-reported outcomes, humeral retroversion and TH after RTSA. While the risk of post-operative complications such as instability, hardware loosening, scapular notching, and prosthetic infection are low, we hypothesize that it is critical to optimize the biomechanical parameters through proper implant positioning and understanding patient-specific scapular and thoracic anatomy to improve surgical outcomes in this subset of patients with TH.

Patients treated with primary RTSA at an academic hospital in 2018 were reviewed for a two-year follow-up. Exclusion criteria were as follows: no pre-existing chest radiographs for Cobb angle measurement, change in post-operative functional status as a result of trauma or medical comorbidities, and missing component placement and parameter information in the operative note. As most patients did not have a pre-operative chest radiograph, only seven patients with a Cobb angle equal to or greater than 40° were eligible. Chart reviews were completed to determine indications for RTSA, hardware positioning parameters such as inferior tilting, humeral stem retroversion, glenosphere size/location, and baseplate size. Clinical data following surgery included review of radiographs and complications. Follow-up in all patients were to a period of two years. The American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) Shoulder Score was used for patient-reported functional and pain outcomes.

The average age of the patients at the time of RTSA was 71 years old, with six female patients and one male patient. The indication for RTSA was primarily rotator cuff arthropathy. Possible correlation between Cobb angle and humeral retroversion was noted, whereby, Cobb angle greater than 40° matched with humeral retroversion greater than 30°, and resulted in significantly higher ASES scores. Two patients with mean Cobb angle of 50° and mean humeral retroversion 37.5° had mean ASES scores of 92.5. Five patients who received mean humeral retroversion of 30° had mean lower ASES scores of 63.7 (p < 0 .05). There was no significant correlation with glenosphere size or position, baseplate size, degree of inferior tilting or lateralization.

Patient-reported outcomes have not been reported in RTSA patients with TH. In this case series, we observed that humeral stem retroversion greater than 30° may be correlated with less post-operative pain and greater patient satisfaction in patients with TH. Further clinical studies are needed to understanding the biomechanical relationship between RTSA, humeral retroversion and TH to optimize patient outcomes.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 39 - 39
1 Dec 2022
Rocos B Cherry A Rabinovitch L Davidson B Jiang F Nielsen C Rampersaud RY Vaisman A Lewis S
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Postoperative surgical site infection in patients treated with lumbosacral fusion has been believed to be caused by perioperative contamination (Perioperative Inside-Out infections) in patients with comorbidities. With the proximity of these incisions to the perianal region and limited patient mobility in the early post-operative period, local contamination from gastrointestinal and/or urogenital flora (Postoperative Outside-In infections) should be considered as a major source of complication.

A single center, retrospective review of adult patients treated with open posterior lumbosacral fusions between January 2014 and January 2021. We aimed to identify common factors in patients experiencing deep postoperative infections. Oncological, minimally invasive, primary infection, and index procedures carried out at other institutions were excluded.

We identified 489 eligible patients, 20 of which required debridement deep to the fascia (4.1%). Mean age (62.9 vs 60.8), operative time (420 vs 390 minutes), estimated blood loss (1772 vs 1790 mL) and median levels fused (8.5 vs 9) were similar between the infected and non-infected groups. There was a higher percentage of deformity patients (75% vs 29%) and increased BMI (32.7 vs 28.4) in the infected group. The mean time from primary procedure to debridement was 40.8 days. Four patients showed no growth on culture. Three showed Staphylococcus species (Perioperative Inside-Out infections) requiring debridement at a mean of 100.3 days (95%CI 0- 225 days). Thirteen patients showed infection with intestinal or urogenital pathogens (Postoperative Outside-In infections) requiring debridement at a mean of 20.0 days (95%CI 9-31 days). Postoperative Outside-In infections led to debridement 80.3 days earlier than Perioperative Inside-Out infections (p= 0.007).

In this series, 65% of deep infections were due to early local contamination by gastrointestinal and/or urogenital tracts pathogens. These infections were debrided significantly earlier than the Staphylococcus species infections. Due to the proximity of the incisions to the perianal region, there should be increased focus on post-operative local wound management to ensure these pathogens are away from the wound during the critical stages of wound healing.


Abstract

Abstract:

Background

The dissatisfaction rate in patients operated with TKR is generally quoted to be around 20% in various registries in patients operated by multiple surgeons. The data of satisfaction rates following a TKR performed by single high volume surgeons is lacking.

Aim

To study the satisfaction rate and Net Promoter Score (NPS) of consecutively operated TKR patients by a single surgeon with a minimum 1 year follow up.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Nov 2022
Khan S Kapoor L Kumar V
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Abstract

Background

Reconstruction following resection of sarcomas of the upper extremity with methods described in the prevalent literature may not be possible in few selected cases. We describe Surgical Phocomelia or Phoco-reduction as a method of limb salvage in such cases of extensive sarcomas of the upper limb with its functional and oncological outcomes.

Methods

Evaluation of functional and oncological outcomes was performed for 11 patients who underwent surgical phocomelia or phocoreduction for extensive sarcomas of the upper limb between 2010 and 2019.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Dec 2022
Charest-Morin R Bailey C McIntosh G Rampersaud RY Jacobs B Cadotte D Fisher C Hall H Manson N Paquet J Christie S Thomas K Phan P Johnson MG Weber M Attabib N Nataraj A Dea N
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In multilevel posterior cervical instrumented fusions, extending the fusion across the cervico-thoracic junction at T1 or T2 (CTJ) has been associated with decreased rate of re-operation and pseudarthrosis but with longer surgical time and increased blood loss. The impact on patient reported outcomes (PROs) remains unclear. The primary objective was to determine whether extending the fusion through the CTJ influenced PROs at 3 and 12 months after surgery. Secondary objectives were to compare the number of patients reaching the minimally clinically important difference (MCID) for the PROs and mJOA, operative time duration, intra-operative blood loss (IOBL), length of stay (LOS), discharge disposition, adverse events (AEs), re-operation within 12 months of the surgery, and patient satisfaction.

This is a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from a multicenter observational cohort study of patients with degenerative cervical myelopathy. Patients who underwent a posterior instrumented fusion of 4 levels of greater (between C2-T2) between January 2015 and October 2020 with 12 months follow-up were included. PROS (NDI, EQ5D, SF-12 PCS and MCS, NRS arm and neck pain) and mJOA were compared using ANCOVA, adjusted for baseline differences. Patient demographics, comorbidities and surgical details were abstracted. Percentafe of patient reaching MCID for these outcomes was compared using chi-square test. Operative duration, IOBL, AEs, re-operation, discharge disposittion, LOS and satisfaction were compared using chi-square test for categorical variables and independent samples t-tests for continuous variables.

A total of 206 patients were included in this study (105 patients not crossing the CTJ and 101 crossing the CTJ). Patients who underwent a construct extending through the CTJ were more likely to be female and had worse baseline EQ5D and NDI scores (p> 0.05). When adjusted for baseline difference, there was no statistically significant difference between the two groups for the PROs and mJOA at 3 and 12 months. Surgical duration was longer (p 0.05). Satisfaction with the surgery was high in both groups but significantly different at 12 months (80% versus 72%, p= 0.042 for the group not crossing the CTJ and the group crossing the CTJ, respectively). The percentage of patients reaching MCID for the NDI score was 55% in the non-crossing group versus 69% in the group extending through the CTJ (p= 0.06).

Up to 12 months after the surgery, there was no statistically significant differences in PROs between posterior construct extended to or not extended to the upper thoracic spine. The adverse event profile did not differ significantly, but longer surgical time and blood loss were associated with construct extending across the CTJ.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Dec 2022
Pedrini F Salmaso L Mori F Sassu P Innocenti M
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Open limb fractures are typically due to a high energy trauma. Several recent studied have showed treatment's superiority when a multidisciplinary approach is applied. World Health Organization reports that isolate limb traumas have an incidence rate of 11.5/100.000, causing high costs in terms of hospitalization and patient disability.

A lack of experience in soft tissue management in orthopaedics and traumatology seems to be the determining factor in the clinical worsening of complex cases. The therapeutic possibilities offered by microsurgery currently permit simultaneous reconstruction of multiple tissues including vessels and nerves, reducing the rate of amputations, recovery time and preventing postoperative complications.

Several scoring systems to assess complex limb traumas exist, among them: NISSSA, MESS, AO and Gustilo Anderson. In 2010, a further scoring system was introduced to focus open fractures of all locations: OTA-OFC. Rather than using a single composite score, the OTA-OFC comprises five components grades (skin, arterial, muscle, bone loss and contamination), each rated from mild to severe. The International Consensus Meeting of 2018 on musculoskeletal infections in orthopaedic surgery identified the OTA-OFC score as an efficient catalogue system with interobserver agreement that is comparable or superior to the Gustilo-Anderson classification. OTA-OFC predicts outcomes such as the need for adjuvant treatments or the likelihood of early amputation. An orthoplastic approach reconstruction must pay adequate attention to bone and soft tissue infections management. Concerning bone management: there is little to no difference in terms of infection rates for Gustilo-Anderson types I–II treated by reamed intramedullary nail, circular external fixator, or unreamed intramedullary nail. In Gustilo-Anderson IIIA-B fractures, circular external fixation appears to provide the lowest infection rates when compared to all other fixation methods.

Different technique can be used for the reconstruction of bone and soft tissue defects based on each clinical scenario. Open fracture management with fasciocutaneous or muscle flaps shows comparable outcomes in terms of bone healing, soft tissue coverage, acute infection and chronic osteomyelitis prevention. The type of flap should be tailored based on the type of the defect, bone or soft tissue, location, extension and depth of the defect, size of the osseous gap, fracture type, and orthopaedic implantation. Local flaps should be considered in low energy trauma, when skin and soft tissue is not traumatized. In high energy fractures with bone exposure, muscle flaps may offer a more reliable reconstruction with fewer flap failures and lower reoperation rates. On exposed fractures several studies report precise timing for a proper reconstruction. Hence, timing of soft tissue coverage is a critical for length of in-hospital stay and most of the early postoperative complications and outcomes. Early coverage has been associated with higher union rates and lower complications and infection rates compared to those reconstructed after 5-7 days. Furthermore, early reconstruction improves flap survival and reduces surgical complexity, as microsurgical free flap procedures become more challenging with a delay due to an increased pro-thrombotic environment, tissue edema and the increasingly friable vessels.

Only those patients presenting to facilities with an actual dedicated orthoplastic trauma service are likely to receive definitive treatment of a severe open fracture with tissue loss within the established parameters of good practice. We conclude that the surgeon's experience appears to be the decisive element in the orthoplastic approach, although reconstructive algorithms may assist in decisional and planification of surgery.