Local antimicrobial therapy is an integral aspect of treating orthopaedic device related infection (ODRI), which is conventionally administered via polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) bone cement. PMMA, however, is limited by a suboptimal antibiotic release profile and a lack of biodegradability. In this study, we compare the efficacy of PMMA versus an antibioticloaded hydrogel in a single- stage revision for chronic methicillin-resistant sheep. Antibiofilm activity of the antibiotic combination (gentamicin and vancomycin) was determined There was a nonsignificant reduction in biofilm with an increasing antibiotic concentration in vitro (p = 0.12), confirming the antibiotic tolerance of the MRSA biofilm. In the in vivo study, four out of five sheep from each treatment group were culture negative. Antibiotic delivery via hydrogel resulted in 10–100 times greater local concentrations for the first 2–3 days compared with PMMA and were comparable thereafter. Systemic concentrations of gentamicin were minimal or undetectable in both groups, while renal and liver function tests were within normal limits. This study shows that a single-stage revision with hydrogel or PMMA is equally effective, although the hydrogel offers certain practical benefits over PMMA, which make it an attractive proposition for clinical use.
Implant-associated osteomyelitis is a devastating complication with poor outcomes following treatment, especially when caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria such as methicillin-resistant 12 female, 2 to 4 year old, Swiss Alpine Sheep were inoculated with MRSA at the time of intramedullary nail insertion in the tibia to develop chronic osteomyelitis. After 8 weeks sheep received a 2-stage revision protocol, with local and systemic antibiotics. Group 1 received the gold standard clinical treatment: systemic vancomycin (2 weeks) followed by rifampicin plus trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (4 weeks), and local gentamicin/vancomycin via PMMA. Group 2 received local gentamicin/vancomycin delivered via THH at both revision surgeries and identical systemic therapy to group 1. Sheep were euthanized 2 weeks following completion of antibiotic therapy. At euthanasia, soft tissue, bone, and sonicate fluid from the hardware was collected for quantitative bacteriology.Aim
Method
The treatment of chronic orthopedic device-related infection (ODRI) often requires multiple surgeries and prolonged antibiotic therapy. In a two-stage exchange procedure, the treatment protocol includes device removal and placement of an antibiotic-loaded bone cement spacer to achieve high local antibiotic concentrations. At the second stage, further surgery is required to remove the spacer and replace it with the definitive device. We have recently developed a thermo-responsive hyaluronan hydrogel (THH) that may be loaded with antibiotics and used as delivery system. Since the material is bio-resorbable, it does not require surgical removal and may therefore be suitable for use as treatment strategy in a single-stage exchange. This aim of this study was to evaluate gentamicin sulphate (Genta)-loaded THH (THH-Genta) for treating a chronic Twelve Swiss-alpine sheep received an IM tibia nail and an inoculation of a gentamicin-sensitive clinical strain of Aim
Methods