Epidemiology and antibiotic resistance of prosthetic joint infections according to time of occurrence, a 10-year study - 13/10/22

Highlights |
• | Prosthetic joint infection is a devastating complication of arthroplasty. |
• | The distribution of bacterial species varies according to time of occurrence. |
• | Empirical antibiotic therapy should target Gram-negative bacilli in all categories. |
• | Piperacillin/tazobactam-vancomycin is an appropriate empirical antibiotic therapy. |
• | The empirical antibiotic therapy must be tailored to local epidemiology. |
Abstract |
Objectives |
To describe the microorganisms responsible for prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) and their antimicrobial susceptibilities, and to propose appropriate empirical antimicrobial treatments (EATs) according to time of occurrence
Methods |
This 10-year retrospective study presents the bacterial etiology of 282 consecutive PJIs in a French hospital according to time of occurrence (adapted from Zimmerli's classification: early, <3 months; delayed, 3–12 months; late acute, >12 months with hematogenous seeding or contiguous spread; late chronic, >12 months without hematogenous seeding). The expected efficacy of various EATs was analyzed for each PJI.
Results |
Staphylococci were the most commonly found bacteria (S. aureus (44.3%), coagulase-negative staphylococci (25.2%) with 15.2% and 49.3% methicillin resistance, respectively), followed by Gram-negative bacilli (GNB) (17.7%) and streptococci (14.9%). The distribution of species varied between categories, but antibiotics targeting GNBs were required in all categories. Imipenem-vancomycin was the most effective combination (99.3%) but should be reserved for patients with suspected resistant GNB. Cefotaxime-vancomycin was less effective in early/delayed and late PJIs (91.1% and 86.1%, respectively), due to resistant GNB and polymicrobial infections. Piperacillin/tazobactam-vancomycin appeared to be appropriate in all situations (>96% efficacy).
Conclusion |
Proposing universal recommendations remains challenging, but a good understanding of the local epidemiology is important for optimizing EATs.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Prosthetic joint infection, Empirical antimicrobial therapy, Bacterial distribution, Epidemiology, Resistance, Time of occurrence
Plan
Vol 85 - N° 5
P. 492-498 - novembre 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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