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The Not-So-Good Prognosis of Streptococcal Periprosthetic Joint Infection Managed by Implant Retention

Authors :
María Dolores del Toro
Matteo Ferrari
Rafael San Juan
Cédric Arvieux
Benjamin M. Clark
Joshua S. Davis
Tristan Ferry
Trisha Peel
Jaime Lora-Tamayo
Eric Senneville
Louis Bernard
Efthymia Giannitsioti
Dace Vigante
Antonio Ramos
José Antonio Iribarren
Dolors Rodríguez-Pardo
Melchor Riera
L Guio
N. Benito
Daniëlle Neut
Rihard Trebše
Karina O'Connell
Craig A Aboltins
Michel Dupon
Alfredo Jover-Sáenz
H K Li
Peter F. M. Choong
Alberto Bahamonde
Josu Baraia-Etxaburu
Thomas Gottlieb
Jaime Esteban
M Jose G. Pais
Mauro José Costa Salles
Kaisa Huotari
Severine Ansart
Alex Soriano
Martin Clauss
Parham Sendi
Nathalie Asseray
Alba Ribera
Nina Gorisek Miksic
Mar Sánchez-Somolinos
Gábor Skaliczki
Lucía Gómez
Javier Ariza
Valérie Zeller
Juan Pablo Horcajada
Julián Palomino
Javier Cobo
Marta Fernandez-Sampedro
Alicia Rico
Ulrike Dapunt
Gwenael Le Moal
Ilker Uçkay
José Maria Barbero
Werner Zimmerli
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 64(12), 1742-1752. Oxford University Press, Lora-Tamayo, Jaime; Senneville, Éric; Ribera, Alba; Bernard, Louis; Dupon, Michel; Zeller, Valérie; Li, Ho Kwong; Arvieux, Cédric; Clauss, Martin; Uçkay, Ilker; Vigante, Dace; Ferry, Tristan; Iribarren, José Antonio; Peel, Trisha N; Sendi, Parham; Miksic, Nina Gorišek; Rodríguez-Pardo, Dolors; Del Toro, María Dolores; Fernández-Sampedro, Marta; Dapunt, Ulrike; ... (2017). The Not-So-Good Prognosis of Streptococcal Periprosthetic Joint Infection Managed by Implant Retention: The Results of a Large Multicenter Study. Clinical infectious diseases, 64(12), pp. 1742-1752. Oxford University Press 10.1093/cid/cix227
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background.: Streptococci are not an infrequent cause of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). Management by debridement, antibiotics, and implant retention (DAIR) is thought to produce a good prognosis, but little is known about the real likelihood of success.Methods.: A retrospective, observational, multicenter, international study was performed during 2003-2012. Eligible patients had a streptococcal PJI that was managed with DAIR. The primary endpoint was failure, defined as death related to infection, relapse/persistence of infection, or the need for salvage therapy.Results.: Overall, 462 cases were included (median age 72 years, 50% men). The most frequent species was Streptococcus agalactiae (34%), and 52% of all cases were hematogenous. Antibiotic treatment was primarily using β-lactams, and 37% of patients received rifampin. Outcomes were evaluable in 444 patients: failure occurred in 187 (42.1%; 95% confidence interval, 37.5%-46.7%) after a median of 62 days from debridement; patients without failure were followed up for a median of 802 days. Independent predictors (hazard ratios) of failure were rheumatoid arthritis (2.36), late post-surgical infection (2.20), and bacteremia (1.69). Independent predictors of success were exchange of removable components (0.60), early use of rifampin (0.98 per day of treatment within the first 30 days), and long treatments (≥21 days) with β-lactams, either as monotherapy (0.48) or in combination with rifampin (0.34).Conclusions.: This is the largest series to our knowledge of streptococcal PJI managed by DAIR, showing a worse prognosis than previously reported. The beneficial effects of exchanging the removable components and of β-lactams are confirmed and maybe also a potential benefit from adding rifampin.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10584838
Volume :
64
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8d7b1e93d2dfc2b2246a895e15af77b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cix227