Litcius/Paper detail

Pseudomonas aeruginosa prosthetic joint-infection outcomes: Prospective, observational study on 43 patients

Héloïse Prié, Vanina Meyssonnier, Younes Kerroumi, Béate Heym, Olivier Lidove, Simon Marmor, Valérie Zeller

2022Frontiers in Medicine23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives Analysis the outcomes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa prosthetic joint infection (PJI), and of their clinical and microbiological characteristics, surgical strategies and antibiotic treatments. Methods Monocenter cohort study in a Bone-and-Joint-Infection Referral Center (08/2004 to 10/2018) including all consecutive P. aeruginosa PJIs. Data were extracted from the prospective database, including the following events: relapses, new PJIs, related deaths. Results Median [IQR]: among the 43 patients included (28 females; 72 [63–80] years old; 27 hip, 15 knee, and 1 shoulder PJIs), 29 (67%) had underlying comorbidities, 12 (28%) had previously been treated for another PJI and 9 (21%) had undergone previous surgeries for their P. aeruginosa PJI. Eleven (26%) PJIs were polymicrobial, 16 (37%) strains were wild type, 8 (19%) ciprofloxacin-resistant. PJIs were classified as late chronic ( n = 33), early postoperative ( n = 9) or acute hematogenous infection ( n = 1). Forty patients underwent surgery: 27 one-stage and 5 two-stage exchanges, 3 debridement and implant retention, and 5 other surgical strategies. Antibiotic treatments were: 29 received 41 [37–43] days of combination therapy (IV anti-pseudomonal β-lactam and 3–5 days of amikacin, then β-lactam and oral ciprofloxacin), followed by oral ciprofloxacin for a total of 12 weeks; 10 received only IV antibiotics for 83 [77–86] days, including 37 [32–46] days of combination therapy; 49 days of ceftazidime alone for 1. During follow-up lasting 33 [24–64.5] months, 2 relapses, 3 new PJIs, and 2 related deaths occurred. Thirty-three (82%) patients and 93% of those managed with one-stage exchange experienced no event. Conclusion Outcomes of our cohort’s P. aeruginosa PJIs—predominantly monomicrobial, chronic, ciprofloxacin-susceptible, treated with one-stage exchange and prolonged IV antibiotics—were 82% favorable.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCiprofloxacinAntibioticsProspective cohort studySurgeryPseudomonas aeruginosaInternal medicineAmikacinCombination therapyGeneticsBacteriaBiologyMicrobiologyOrthopedic Infections and TreatmentsInfections and bacterial resistanceAntibiotic Resistance in Bacteria