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Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study

Background: fracture-related infection (FRI) remains a serious complication in orthopedic trauma. To standardize daily clinical practice, a consensus definition was established, based on confirmatory and suggestive criteria. In the presence of clinical confirmatory criteria, the diagnosis of an FRI...

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Autores principales: Vanvelk, Niels, Van Lieshout, Esther M. M., Onsea, Jolien, Sliepen, Jonathan, Govaert, Geertje, IJpma, Frank F. A., Depypere, Melissa, Ferguson, Jamie, McNally, Martin, Obremskey, William T., Zalavras, Charalampos, Verhofstad, Michael H. J., Metsemakers, Willem-Jan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Copernicus GmbH 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10134751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37123499
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/jbji-8-133-2023
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author Vanvelk, Niels
Van Lieshout, Esther M. M.
Onsea, Jolien
Sliepen, Jonathan
Govaert, Geertje
IJpma, Frank F. A.
Depypere, Melissa
Ferguson, Jamie
McNally, Martin
Obremskey, William T.
Zalavras, Charalampos
Verhofstad, Michael H. J.
Metsemakers, Willem-Jan
author_facet Vanvelk, Niels
Van Lieshout, Esther M. M.
Onsea, Jolien
Sliepen, Jonathan
Govaert, Geertje
IJpma, Frank F. A.
Depypere, Melissa
Ferguson, Jamie
McNally, Martin
Obremskey, William T.
Zalavras, Charalampos
Verhofstad, Michael H. J.
Metsemakers, Willem-Jan
author_sort Vanvelk, Niels
collection PubMed
description Background: fracture-related infection (FRI) remains a serious complication in orthopedic trauma. To standardize daily clinical practice, a consensus definition was established, based on confirmatory and suggestive criteria. In the presence of clinical confirmatory criteria, the diagnosis of an FRI is evident, and treatment can be started. However, if these criteria are absent, the decision to surgically collect deep tissue cultures can only be based on suggestive criteria. The primary study aim was to characterize the subpopulation of FRI patients presenting without clinical confirmatory criteria (fistula, sinus, wound breakdown, purulent wound drainage or presence of pus during surgery). The secondary aims were to describe the prevalence of the diagnostic criteria for FRI and present the microbiological characteristics, both for the entire FRI population. Methods: a multicenter, retrospective cohort study was performed, reporting the demographic, clinical and microbiological characteristics of 609 patients (with 613 fractures) who were treated for FRI based on the recommendations of a multidisciplinary team. Patients were divided in three groups, including the total population and two subgroups of patients presenting with or without clinical confirmatory criteria. Results: clinical and microbiological confirmatory criteria were present in 77 % and 87 % of the included fractures, respectively. Of patients, 23 % presented without clinical confirmatory criteria, and they mostly displayed one (31 %) or two (23 %) suggestive clinical criteria (redness, swelling, warmth, pain, fever, new-onset joint effusion, persisting/increasing/new-onset wound drainage). The prevalence of any suggestive clinical, radiological or laboratory criteria in this subgroup was 85 %, 55 % and 97 %, respectively. Most infections were monomicrobial (64 %) and caused by Staphylococcus aureus. Conclusion: clinical confirmatory criteria were absent in 23 % of the FRIs. In these cases, the decision to operatively collect deep tissue cultures was based on clinical, radiological and laboratory suggestive criteria. The combined use of these criteria should guide physicians in the management pathway of FRI. Further research is needed to provide guidelines on the decision to proceed with surgery when only these suggestive criteria are present.
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spelling pubmed-101347512023-04-28 Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study Vanvelk, Niels Van Lieshout, Esther M. M. Onsea, Jolien Sliepen, Jonathan Govaert, Geertje IJpma, Frank F. A. Depypere, Melissa Ferguson, Jamie McNally, Martin Obremskey, William T. Zalavras, Charalampos Verhofstad, Michael H. J. Metsemakers, Willem-Jan J Bone Jt Infect Original Full-Length Article Background: fracture-related infection (FRI) remains a serious complication in orthopedic trauma. To standardize daily clinical practice, a consensus definition was established, based on confirmatory and suggestive criteria. In the presence of clinical confirmatory criteria, the diagnosis of an FRI is evident, and treatment can be started. However, if these criteria are absent, the decision to surgically collect deep tissue cultures can only be based on suggestive criteria. The primary study aim was to characterize the subpopulation of FRI patients presenting without clinical confirmatory criteria (fistula, sinus, wound breakdown, purulent wound drainage or presence of pus during surgery). The secondary aims were to describe the prevalence of the diagnostic criteria for FRI and present the microbiological characteristics, both for the entire FRI population. Methods: a multicenter, retrospective cohort study was performed, reporting the demographic, clinical and microbiological characteristics of 609 patients (with 613 fractures) who were treated for FRI based on the recommendations of a multidisciplinary team. Patients were divided in three groups, including the total population and two subgroups of patients presenting with or without clinical confirmatory criteria. Results: clinical and microbiological confirmatory criteria were present in 77 % and 87 % of the included fractures, respectively. Of patients, 23 % presented without clinical confirmatory criteria, and they mostly displayed one (31 %) or two (23 %) suggestive clinical criteria (redness, swelling, warmth, pain, fever, new-onset joint effusion, persisting/increasing/new-onset wound drainage). The prevalence of any suggestive clinical, radiological or laboratory criteria in this subgroup was 85 %, 55 % and 97 %, respectively. Most infections were monomicrobial (64 %) and caused by Staphylococcus aureus. Conclusion: clinical confirmatory criteria were absent in 23 % of the FRIs. In these cases, the decision to operatively collect deep tissue cultures was based on clinical, radiological and laboratory suggestive criteria. The combined use of these criteria should guide physicians in the management pathway of FRI. Further research is needed to provide guidelines on the decision to proceed with surgery when only these suggestive criteria are present. Copernicus GmbH 2023-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC10134751/ /pubmed/37123499 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/jbji-8-133-2023 Text en Copyright: © 2023 Niels Vanvelk et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this licence, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Original Full-Length Article
Vanvelk, Niels
Van Lieshout, Esther M. M.
Onsea, Jolien
Sliepen, Jonathan
Govaert, Geertje
IJpma, Frank F. A.
Depypere, Melissa
Ferguson, Jamie
McNally, Martin
Obremskey, William T.
Zalavras, Charalampos
Verhofstad, Michael H. J.
Metsemakers, Willem-Jan
Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
title Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
title_full Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
title_fullStr Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
title_short Diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
title_sort diagnosis of fracture-related infection in patients without clinical confirmatory criteria: an international retrospective cohort study
topic Original Full-Length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10134751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37123499
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/jbji-8-133-2023
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