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General Orthopaedics

IODINE-IMPREGNATED INCISION DRAPE DOES NOT PREVENT INFECTION IN KNEE ARTHROPLASTY SURGERY: 12 MONTHS' FOLLOW-UP IN A COHORT OF 1187 PATIENTS

European Bone and Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) meeting, Antwerp, Belgium, September 2019.



Abstract

Aim

The primary aim of this study was to examine whether the use of iodine impregnated incision drape (IIID) decreased the risk of periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs). The secondary aim was to investigate whether intraoperative contamination could predict postoperative infection.

PJI is a devastating incident for the patients and in a population that is getting older and the incidence of arthroplasty surgery is rising it is vital to keep the infection rate as low as possible. Despite prophylactic measures as pre-operative decontamination, antisepsis and prophylactic antibiotics the infection rate has been constant at 1–2%.

Method

We performed a transregional, prospective, randomized two arm study (IIID vs control group) of 1187 patients undergoing primary knee arthroplasty surgery. A database with patient demographics and surgical observations was established with the purpose of following the patients for ten years. Patients, who developed an infection within the first year of surgery were analyzed for correlation with the intraoperative bacterial findings and the use of IIID.

Results

31/1187 (3.6%) patients were re-operated during the follow-up period. 18/1187 (1.5%) patients were deemed infected and received antibiotic treatment. 9/18 patients deemed infected were male. Of the 18 infected patients 2 were contaminated at the primary surgery. Chi square test showed no correlation between contamination and infection (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.38–2.46, p=0.95). 9 of the 18 infected patients were operated with IIID at the primary surgery. No correlation was found between the use of IIID at primary surgery and subsequent infection (OR 0.86, 95% CI 0.20–3.79, p=1)

Conclusions

We found no effect of the use of IIID and subsequent development of PJI. Nor did we find a correlation between the intraoperative contamination and development of PJI within the first year of follow-up.

Acknowledgements

University of Copenhagen and 3M Health Care (St. Paul, Minnesota) funded the study. 3M did not participate in the design of the study, data collection, data analysis or data interpretation.


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