학술논문

Is sonication of antibiotic-loaded cement spacers useful in two-stage revision of prosthetic joint infection?
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Microbiological Methods. Jan2019, Vol. 156, p81-84. 4p.
Subject
*SONICATION
*ANTIBIOTIC prophylaxis
*ARTIFICIAL joints
*SYMPTOMS
PERSISTENCE
Language
ISSN
0167-7012
Abstract
Abstract Background In a two-stage exchange protocol for prosthetic joint infection (PJI), bacteria surviving over the antibiotic-loaded cement spacers may cause the persistence of infection with renewed clinical symptoms following the surgery. Culture after sonication of removed prosthesis is more sensitive than conventional periprosthetic tissue culture for the microbiological diagnosis of PJI. The aim of this study was to assess whether sonication of the spacer at the time of the second-stage procedure may improve the diagnosis of persistent PJI. Methods We evaluated by microbiological culture the sonication fluid from 222 cement spacers implanted in a two-stage exchange protocol in 157 patients affected by PJI. A mean of 1.3 (range, 1–4) spacer per patient was performed. Results In 53 out of 222 spacers analyzed infection was confirmed according to the MSIS criteria. In 22 cases the infection was confirmed by both cultures on periprosthetic tissue and on sonication fluid from the spacers. In 23 cases persistent PJI was identified because of only cultures of periprosthetic tissue and 8 because of results obtained after spacer sonication. The sensitivity of periprosthetic tissue cultures was higher than that of cultures performed on sonication fluid (84.9% vs 56.6%, p <.001). Conclusions Even though sonication of cement spacers has performances inferior than those reported for prosthesis, it can be considered a complementary method to unravel persistent infection during a two-stage exchange protocol for PJI. Highlights • Sonication of cement spacers has performances inferior than for prosthesis. • It is a complementary method to unravel persistent infection. • More relapsing PJI were observed in patients with multiple spacer exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]