Cargando…

The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails

Background: The first objective of this retrospective study was to assess infection control rates in patients with chronic post-traumatic osteomyelitis (CPTO) of the femur or tibia treated with antibiotic cement-coated nails. The second objective was to compare the efficacy of custom-made nails vers...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Garabano, Germán, del Sel, Hernán, Rodriguez, Joaquin Anibal, Perez Alamino, Leonel, Pesciallo, Cesar Angel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Copernicus GmbH 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8738920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35024298
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/jbji-6-457-2021
_version_ 1784629006226685952
author Garabano, Germán
del Sel, Hernán
Rodriguez, Joaquin Anibal
Perez Alamino, Leonel
Pesciallo, Cesar Angel
author_facet Garabano, Germán
del Sel, Hernán
Rodriguez, Joaquin Anibal
Perez Alamino, Leonel
Pesciallo, Cesar Angel
author_sort Garabano, Germán
collection PubMed
description Background: The first objective of this retrospective study was to assess infection control rates in patients with chronic post-traumatic osteomyelitis (CPTO) of the femur or tibia treated with antibiotic cement-coated nails. The second objective was to compare the efficacy of custom-made nails versus commercially available antibiotic-coated nails in terms of infection control and need for reoperation. Methods: We reviewed a consecutive series of CPTO patients treated with antibiotic-coated nails who had a minimum follow-up of 24 months. We recorded the characteristics of the initial injury, the type of nail used, cement–nail debonding, infecting microorganisms, operating time, infection control, need for reoperation, and failure rate. We performed a comparative analysis between nails manufactured in the operating room (i.e., custom-made) and those commercially available. Results: Thirty patients were included. The affected bones were the femur ( [Formula: see text] ) and the tibia ( [Formula: see text] ). Twenty-one of the 30 initial injuries were open fractures. Staphylococcus aureus was the most frequently isolated microorganism (50 %). Sixteen patients were treated with custom-made nails and 14 with commercially available antibiotic-coated nails. At the time of extraction, four out of five custom-made antibiotic-coated nails experienced cement–bone debonding. Commercial nails were associated with shorter operating times ( [Formula: see text] ). The overall infection control rate was 96.66 %. Eight (26.66 %) patients needed reoperation. There was one failure (3.33 %) in the group treated with custom-made antibiotic-coated nails. We did not find significant differences between nail types in terms of reoperation, infection control, and failure rate. Conclusions: The use of antibiotic cement-coated nails proved useful in CPTO treatment. Commercially available nails had significantly shorter operating times and did not present cement–bone debonding during removal. Our results seem to indicate that both nail types are similar in terms of infection control and reoperation rates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8738920
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Copernicus GmbH
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87389202022-01-11 The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails Garabano, Germán del Sel, Hernán Rodriguez, Joaquin Anibal Perez Alamino, Leonel Pesciallo, Cesar Angel J Bone Jt Infect Original Full-Length Article Background: The first objective of this retrospective study was to assess infection control rates in patients with chronic post-traumatic osteomyelitis (CPTO) of the femur or tibia treated with antibiotic cement-coated nails. The second objective was to compare the efficacy of custom-made nails versus commercially available antibiotic-coated nails in terms of infection control and need for reoperation. Methods: We reviewed a consecutive series of CPTO patients treated with antibiotic-coated nails who had a minimum follow-up of 24 months. We recorded the characteristics of the initial injury, the type of nail used, cement–nail debonding, infecting microorganisms, operating time, infection control, need for reoperation, and failure rate. We performed a comparative analysis between nails manufactured in the operating room (i.e., custom-made) and those commercially available. Results: Thirty patients were included. The affected bones were the femur ( [Formula: see text] ) and the tibia ( [Formula: see text] ). Twenty-one of the 30 initial injuries were open fractures. Staphylococcus aureus was the most frequently isolated microorganism (50 %). Sixteen patients were treated with custom-made nails and 14 with commercially available antibiotic-coated nails. At the time of extraction, four out of five custom-made antibiotic-coated nails experienced cement–bone debonding. Commercial nails were associated with shorter operating times ( [Formula: see text] ). The overall infection control rate was 96.66 %. Eight (26.66 %) patients needed reoperation. There was one failure (3.33 %) in the group treated with custom-made antibiotic-coated nails. We did not find significant differences between nail types in terms of reoperation, infection control, and failure rate. Conclusions: The use of antibiotic cement-coated nails proved useful in CPTO treatment. Commercially available nails had significantly shorter operating times and did not present cement–bone debonding during removal. Our results seem to indicate that both nail types are similar in terms of infection control and reoperation rates. Copernicus GmbH 2021-12-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8738920/ /pubmed/35024298 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/jbji-6-457-2021 Text en Copyright: © 2021 Germán Garabano 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
Garabano, Germán
del Sel, Hernán
Rodriguez, Joaquin Anibal
Perez Alamino, Leonel
Pesciallo, Cesar Angel
The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
title The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
title_full The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
title_fullStr The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
title_full_unstemmed The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
title_short The effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
title_sort effectiveness of antibiotic cement-coated nails in post-traumatic femoral and tibial osteomyelitis – comparative analysis of custom-made versus commercially available nails
topic Original Full-Length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8738920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35024298
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/jbji-6-457-2021
work_keys_str_mv AT garabanogerman theeffectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT delselhernan theeffectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT rodriguezjoaquinanibal theeffectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT perezalaminoleonel theeffectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT pesciallocesarangel theeffectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT garabanogerman effectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT delselhernan effectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT rodriguezjoaquinanibal effectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT perezalaminoleonel effectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails
AT pesciallocesarangel effectivenessofantibioticcementcoatednailsinposttraumaticfemoralandtibialosteomyelitiscomparativeanalysisofcustommadeversuscommerciallyavailablenails