1. The polymicrobial infection affects the infection recurrence rate (not failure) in treating femoral and tibial bone defects with the Masquelet technique-a comparative retrospective analysis of 54 patients with mono- and polymicrobial infections.
- Author
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Garabano G, Amadei Enghelmayer RE, Perez Alamino L, Viollaz GM, and Pesciallo CA
- Subjects
- Humans, Tibia surgery, Retrospective Studies, Femur, Treatment Outcome, Bone Transplantation adverse effects, Bone Transplantation methods, Coinfection complications, Tibial Fractures complications, Tibial Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: This study evaluated whether polymicrobial infection affects reoperation rates due to infection recurrence and treatment failure with the Masquelet technique in infected posttraumatic segmental bone defects of the femur and tibia., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed patients treated between 2012 and 2021 in two trauma referral centers. We evaluated demographic data, injury, treatment, infection recurrence, failures, and bone healing rates according to whether the infection was mono- or polymicrobial. After uni-bivariate analysis between patients with polymicrobial and monomicrobial infection, we identified the variables associated with infection recurrence and failure through multivariate analysis., Results: We analyzed 54 patients, 30 (55.55%) with tibial and 24 (44.44%) femoral segmental bone defects, with a mean follow-up of 41.7 ± 15.0 months. Forty-four (81.48%) presented monomicrobial, and 10 (18.51%) polymicrobial infections. Comparatively, the need for soft tissue reconstruction and the infection recurrence rate was significantly higher in patients with polymicrobial infections. There was no significant difference in the failure rate (20 vs. 6.81% p = 0.23). Multivariable logistic regression analysis identified the polymicrobial infection as the only independent variable associated with infection recurrence (Odds Ratio = 11.07; p = 0.0017)., Conclusion: Our analysis suggests that polymicrobial infection is associated with a higher risk of infection recurrence in treating the femur and tibia segmental bone defects with the Masquelet technique. This information can help surgeons to inform patients about this and give them a realistic expectation of the outcome and the possibility of reoperation., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag France SAS, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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