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Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure

Introduction: Preoperative anemia in patients undergoing a two-stage septic revision arthroplasty may be a factor of reinfection, even in the presence of aggressive antimicrobial therapy. Patient Blood Management (PBM) in such patients is challenging. We evaluate the impact of anemia existing before...

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Autores principales: Bredeche, Faustine, Gounot, Isabelle, Belgaïd, Vincent, Macabeo, Caroline, Rouhana, Kaissar, Aubrun, Frederic, Ferry, Tristan, Servien, Elvire, Lustig, Sebastien, Dziadzko, Mikhail
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: EDP Sciences 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7731908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33306020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/sicotj/2020046
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author Bredeche, Faustine
Gounot, Isabelle
Belgaïd, Vincent
Macabeo, Caroline
Rouhana, Kaissar
Aubrun, Frederic
Ferry, Tristan
Servien, Elvire
Lustig, Sebastien
Dziadzko, Mikhail
author_facet Bredeche, Faustine
Gounot, Isabelle
Belgaïd, Vincent
Macabeo, Caroline
Rouhana, Kaissar
Aubrun, Frederic
Ferry, Tristan
Servien, Elvire
Lustig, Sebastien
Dziadzko, Mikhail
author_sort Bredeche, Faustine
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Preoperative anemia in patients undergoing a two-stage septic revision arthroplasty may be a factor of reinfection, even in the presence of aggressive antimicrobial therapy. Patient Blood Management (PBM) in such patients is challenging. We evaluate the impact of anemia existing before re-implantation on a failure rate after two-stage septic total knee arthroplasty (rTKA), and explore feasibility of a PBM strategy implementation in these patients. Materials and methods: A retrospective study of patients from January 2010 to January 2015 in a French regional referral center was performed. Patients undergoing a two-stage rTKA for infection after successful primary TKA were identified and followed up to 31.12.2018. The primary outcome (failure) was defined as surgical site infection after re-implantation requiring new surgery. The secondary outcomes were time to failure, the time between explantation/reimplantation, transfusion rate during the second stage. Preoperative anemia was defined as Hb level < 12 g/L before the re-implantation. Results: 69 patients were identified; 17 (24%) developed reinfection of rTKA in 105 [11.4–156] days. In these patients pre-implantation anemia was more frequent (n = 13(76.5%) in failed vs. n = 21(40%) in non-failed, p = 0.0110). During the explantation stage, there were no significant group differences in age, sex, comorbidity, type of spacer and antimicrobial therapy, iron supplementation, or transfusion rate. The median time between explantation/reimplantation surgery was 51 [43–71.5] days, indifferent between the two groups. Intraoperative transfusion during reimplantation was required in 12 (17%) patients, more frequent in failed patients. None of the patients had contraindications for the PBM strategy except the cell-saver use. Conclusion: In two-stage septic rTKA preoperative anemia was almost two times more frequent and associated with an elevated rate of septic failure. The time-frame between explantation and-re-implantation is sufficient to implement a PBM strategy for all anemic patients. Before-after studies would be of interest to determine the best PBM strategy to prevent anemia-associated septic failure in such a condition.
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spelling pubmed-77319082020-12-18 Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure Bredeche, Faustine Gounot, Isabelle Belgaïd, Vincent Macabeo, Caroline Rouhana, Kaissar Aubrun, Frederic Ferry, Tristan Servien, Elvire Lustig, Sebastien Dziadzko, Mikhail SICOT J Original Article Introduction: Preoperative anemia in patients undergoing a two-stage septic revision arthroplasty may be a factor of reinfection, even in the presence of aggressive antimicrobial therapy. Patient Blood Management (PBM) in such patients is challenging. We evaluate the impact of anemia existing before re-implantation on a failure rate after two-stage septic total knee arthroplasty (rTKA), and explore feasibility of a PBM strategy implementation in these patients. Materials and methods: A retrospective study of patients from January 2010 to January 2015 in a French regional referral center was performed. Patients undergoing a two-stage rTKA for infection after successful primary TKA were identified and followed up to 31.12.2018. The primary outcome (failure) was defined as surgical site infection after re-implantation requiring new surgery. The secondary outcomes were time to failure, the time between explantation/reimplantation, transfusion rate during the second stage. Preoperative anemia was defined as Hb level < 12 g/L before the re-implantation. Results: 69 patients were identified; 17 (24%) developed reinfection of rTKA in 105 [11.4–156] days. In these patients pre-implantation anemia was more frequent (n = 13(76.5%) in failed vs. n = 21(40%) in non-failed, p = 0.0110). During the explantation stage, there were no significant group differences in age, sex, comorbidity, type of spacer and antimicrobial therapy, iron supplementation, or transfusion rate. The median time between explantation/reimplantation surgery was 51 [43–71.5] days, indifferent between the two groups. Intraoperative transfusion during reimplantation was required in 12 (17%) patients, more frequent in failed patients. None of the patients had contraindications for the PBM strategy except the cell-saver use. Conclusion: In two-stage septic rTKA preoperative anemia was almost two times more frequent and associated with an elevated rate of septic failure. The time-frame between explantation and-re-implantation is sufficient to implement a PBM strategy for all anemic patients. Before-after studies would be of interest to determine the best PBM strategy to prevent anemia-associated septic failure in such a condition. EDP Sciences 2020-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7731908/ /pubmed/33306020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/sicotj/2020046 Text en © The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2020 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Bredeche, Faustine
Gounot, Isabelle
Belgaïd, Vincent
Macabeo, Caroline
Rouhana, Kaissar
Aubrun, Frederic
Ferry, Tristan
Servien, Elvire
Lustig, Sebastien
Dziadzko, Mikhail
Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
title Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
title_full Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
title_fullStr Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
title_full_unstemmed Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
title_short Anemia before reimplantation surgery: An overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
title_sort anemia before reimplantation surgery: an overlooked modifiable risk factor of septic revision knee arthroplasty failure
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7731908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33306020
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/sicotj/2020046
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