Successive new-pathogen prosthetic joint reinfections: Observational cohort study on 61 patients - 02/01/22
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Highlights |
• | New-pathogen prosthetic joint reinfection mostly often affects the knee. |
• | Hematogenous staphylococcal and streptococcal infections are a frequent feature. |
• | The skin is the most common portal of entry. |
• | Treatment strategies should be decided case-by-case. |
Abstract |
Objectives |
Prosthetic joint infection (PJI) treatment failure may be due to relapsing infection (same microorganism) or new-pathogen reinfection (npPJI). The aim was to describe npPJI epidemiological, clinical and microbiological characteristics, their treatments and outcomes, and identify their risk factors.
Methods |
This observational, single-center, cohort study was conducted in a French Referral Center for Bone-and-Joint Infections between September 2004 and December 2015. Patients treated for at least two successive hip or knee PJIs in the same joint with a different pathogen were identified in the prospective database. We compared each patient's first PJI and subsequent npPJI(s) to analyze the type and microbiological characteristics of npPJIs. To search for npPJI risk factors, we compared those cases to a random selection of 122 “unique-episode” PJIs treated during the study period.
Results |
Among 990 PJIs, 79 (8%) npPJIs occurring in 61 patients were included. New-pathogen prosthetic joint infections (npPJIs) developed more frequently in knee (14%) than hip prostheses (5%). Median interval from the first PJI to the npPJI was 26 months. New-pathogen prosthetic joint reinfections (npPJIs) more frequently spread hematogenously (60% vs 33%) and were predominantly caused by Staphylococcus (36%) or Streptococcus (33%) species. Multivariate analysis identified two risk factors: chronic dermatitis (odds ratio: 6.23; P<0.05) and cardiovascular diseases (odds ratio: 2.71; P<0.01). A curative strategy was applied to 70%: DAIR (29%), one-stage (28%), two-stage exchange arthroplasty (7%) or other strategies (7%). The others received prolonged suppressive antibiotic therapy (30%).
Conclusions |
New-pathogen prosthetic joint infections (npPJIs) are complex infections requiring management by multidisciplinary teams that should be adapted to each clinical situation.
Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.Keywords : New-pathogen prosthetic joint reinfection, Hematogenous infection, Prosthetic knee and hip infections, Staphylococcal and streptococcal infections, Skin lesions
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Vol 89 - N° 1
Articolo 105254- Gennaio 2022 Ritorno al numeroBenvenuto su EM|consulte, il riferimento dei professionisti della salute.
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