1. Diagnostic, clinical management, and outcome of bone flap-related osteomyelitis after cranioplasty.
- Author
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Dechaene, Victor, Gallet, Clémentine, Soueges, Sarah, Liu, Lannie, Delabar, Violaine, Adélaïde, Léopold, Jarraud, Sophie, Dauwalder, Olivier, Jouanneau, Emmanuel, Wan, Marie, Jacquesson, Timothée, Guyotat, Jacques, Conrad, Anne, Triffault-Fillit, Claire, Ferry, Tristan, and Valour, Florent
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OSTEOMYELITIS , *CUTIBACTERIUM acnes , *DEBRIDEMENT , *GRAM-negative bacteria , *STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus , *CURETTAGE , *ODDS ratio , *TREATMENT failure - Abstract
• Post-cranioplasty bone flap infection is associated with a high risk of treatment failure. • Main implicated pathogens are staphylococci, Cutibacterium acnes, and gram-negative bacilli. • Extensive surgical debridement, including curettage of bone edges, is necessary. • These difficult-to-treat infections require dedicated multidisciplinary management. We aimed to describe diagnostic, management, and outcome of bone flap-related osteomyelitis after cranioplasty. Patients followed up in our tertiary care hospital for bone flap-related osteomyelitis after cranioplasty were included in a retrospective cohort (2008-2021). Determinants of treatment failure were assessed using logistic regression and Kaplan-Meier curves analysis. The 144 included patients (81 [56.3%] males; median age 53.4 [interquartile range [IQR], 42.6-62.5] years) mostly presented wound abnormalities (n = 115, 79.9%). All infections were documented, the main pathogens being Staphylococcus aureus (n = 64, 44.4%), Cutibacterium acnes (n = 57, 39.6%), gram-negative bacilli (n = 40, 27.8%) and/or non- aureus staphylococci (n = 34, 23.6%). Surgery was performed in 140 (97.2%) cases, for bone flap removal (n = 102, 72.9%) or debridement with flap retention (n = 31, 22.1%), along with 12.7 (IQR, 8.0-14.0) weeks of antimicrobial therapy. After a follow-up of 117.1 (IQR, 62.5-235.5) weeks, 37 (26.1%) failures were observed: 16 (43.2%) infection persistence, three (8.1%) relapses, 22 (59.5%) superinfections and/or two (1.7%) infection-related deaths. Excluding superinfections, determinants of the 19 (13.4%) specific failures were an index craniectomy for brain tumor (odds ratio = 4.038, P = 0.033) and curettage of bone edges (odds ratio = 0.342, P = 0.048). Post-craniectomy bone flap osteomyelitis are difficult-to-treat infection, necessitating prolonged antimicrobial therapy with appropriate surgical debridement, and advocating for multidisciplinary management in dedicated reference centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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