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Difficult-to-treat pathogens significantly reduce infection resolution in periprosthetic joint infections

Authors :
Sascha Gravius
Hendrik Kohlhof
Gunnar T.R. Hischebeth
Matthias D. Wimmer
Martin Gathen
Frank A. Schildberg
Frank S. Fröschen
Thomas M. Randau
Source :
Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease. 98(2)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is a feared complication after arthroplasty. Our hypothesis was that PJI caused by difficult-to-treat (DTT) pathogens has a worse outcome compared with non-DTT PJI. Routine clinical data on 77 consecutive patients with confirmed PJI treated with 2-stage exchange arthroplasty were placed in DTT and non-DTT PJI groups and analyzed. The main outcome variable was that the patient was definitively free of infection after 2 years. We found definitive infection resolution in 31 patients in the DTT group (68.9%) and 28 patients (87.5%) in the non-DTT group (P < 0.05). The necessity for revision surgery until assumed resolution of infection was significantly more frequent in the DTT group with 4.72 ± 3.03 operations versus 2.41 ± 3.02 operations in the non-DTT group (P < 0.05). PJI caused by DTT bacteria is associated with significantly higher numbers of revision operations and significantly inferior definitive infection resolution.

Details

ISSN :
18790070
Volume :
98
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a1dba3c74a306617d67f94d5a45c391