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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 96 - 96
1 Dec 2022
Bohm E Rolfson O Sayers A Wilkinson JM Overgaard S Lyman S Finney K Franklin P Dunn J Denissen G Halstrom B W-Dahl A Van Steenbergen L Ayers D Ingelsrud L Navarro R Nelissen R
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Increased collection of patient-reported outcome measures (PROM) in registries enables international comparison of patient-centered outcomes after knee and hip replacement. We aimed to investigate 1) variations in PROM improvement, 2) the possible confounding factor of BMI, and 3) differences in comorbidity distributions between registries.

Registries affiliated with the International Society of Arthroplasty Registries (ISAR) or OECD membership countries were invited to report aggregate EQ-5D, OKS, OHS, HOOS-PS and KOOS-PS values. Eligible patients underwent primary total, unilateral knee or hip replacement for osteoarthritis within three years and had completed PROMs preoperatively and either 6 or 12 months postoperatively, excluding patients with subsequent revisions. For each PROM cohort, Chi-square tests were performed for BMI distributions across registries and 12 predefined PROM strata (male/female, age 20-64/65-74/>75, high or low preoperative PROM scores). Comorbidity distributions were reported for available comorbidity indexes.

Thirteen registries from 9 countries contributed data, n~130000 knee (range 140 to 79848) and n~113000 hip (range 137 to 85281). Mean EQ-5D index values (10 registries) ranged from 0.53 to 0.71 (knee) and 0.50 to 0.70 (hips) preoperatively and 0.78 to 0.85 (knee) and 0.83 to 0.87 (hip) postoperatively. Mean OKS (6 registries) ranged from 19.3 to 23.6 preoperatively and 36.2 to 41.2 postoperatively. Mean OHS (7 registries) ranged from 18.0 to 23.2 preoperatively and 39.8 to 44.2 postoperatively. Four registries reported KOOS-PS and three reported HOOS-PS. Proportions of patients with BMI >30 ranged from 35 to 62% (10 knee registries) and 16 to 43% (11 hip registries). For both knee and hip registries, distributions of patients across six BMI categories differed significantly among registries (p30 were for patients in the youngest age groups (20 to 64 and 65 to 74 years) with the lowest baseline scores. Additionally, females with lowest preoperative PROM scores had highest BMI. These findings were echoed for the OHS and OKS cohorts. Proportions of patients with ASA scores ≥3 ranged from 7 to 42% (9 knee registries) and 6 to 35% (8 hip registries).

PROM-score improvement varies between international registries, which may be partially explained by differences in age, sex and preoperative scores. BMI and comorbidity may be relevant to adjust for.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_23 | Pages 34 - 34
1 Dec 2016
Gbejuade H Hidalgo-Arroy A Sayers A Leeming J Lovering A Blom A Webb J
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Aim

To evaluate the ability of different combinations of antibiotic loaded cement to inhibit bacteria growth and biofilm formation.

Method

Cement beads were aseptically prepared using Palacos R (plain 40g PMMA cement) or Palacos R+G (40g PMMA cement containing industrially added 0.5g of gentamicin), with or without supplementary antibiotics as follows: Palacos R; Palacos R+G; Palacos R plus 1g / 2g daptomycin; Palacos R+G plus 1g / 2g of daptomycin; Palacos R plus 1g / 2g vancomcyin; and Palacos R+G plus 1g / 2g vancomycin. After production, each antibiotic loaded acrylic cement (ALAC) combination was allocated into two groups (group 1 and 2).

The group 2 cement beads were initially eluted in broth at 37o C for 72hours then transferred to fresh broth containing a known concentration of bacteria. The group 1 samples were not eluted but directly immerse in culture broth containing bacteria. All samples were thereafter incubated at 37oC for 24 hours. After incubation, group 1 samples were visually assessed for bacterial growth, while for the group 2 samples, biofilm formation were quantified using ultrasonication and viable bacteria counting technique. Three proficient biofilm forming Staphylococcus epidermidis bacterial strains (1457, 1585-RA and 5179-R1) were used for all experiments and the bacteria counts were expressed as colony forming units / ml (CFU/ml).