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General Orthopaedics

AN ENHANCED UNDERSTANDING OF CULTURE-NEGATIVE PERIPROSTHETIC JOINT INFECTION WITH NEXT-GENERATION SEQUENCING

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) 31st Annual Congress, London, England, October 2018. Part 1.



Abstract

Background

Recent reports demonstrate that Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) facilitates pathogen identification in the context of culture-negative PJI; however the clinical relevance of the polymicrobial genomic signal often generated remains unknown. This study was conceived to explore: (1) the ability of NGS to identify pathogens in culture-negative PJI; and (2) determine whether organisms detected by NGS, as part of a prospective observational study, had any role in later failure of patients undergoing surgical treatment for PJI.

Methods

In this prospective study samples were collected in 238 consecutive patients undergoing revision total hip and knee arthroplasties. Of these 83 patients (34.9%) had PJI, as determined using the Musculoskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) criteria, and of these 20 were culture-negative (CN-PJI). Synovial fluid, deep tissue and swabs were obtained at the time of surgery and sent for NGS and culture/MALDI-TOF. Patients undergoing reimplantation were excluded. Treatment failure was assessed using the previously described Delphi criteria. In cases of re-operation, organisms present were confirmed by culture and MALDI-TOF. Concordance of the infecting pathogen(s) at failure with the NGS analysis at the initial stage CN- PJI procedure was determined.

Results

Twenty cases of culture-negative PJI were identified (Figure 1). CNPJI rate in our samples was 24%. NGS was positive in 18 cases. Two cases were both culture and NGS negative. Eight CN-PJIs (8/20; 40%) failed by re-operation with infection recurrence confirmed on culture. In 7 of these 8 cases (88%), the organism at failure was present on NGS at the time of the initial CN-PJI procedure. The remaining case failed with a new organism, via likely hematogenous seeding from an inter-current infection (Figure 2). NGS detected several organisms in CN-PJI cases (Figure 3).

Discussion

CN-PJI is often associated with polymicrobial genomic organism profile. Furthermore, most of the failures by infection recurrence were due to an organism previously detected by NGS. Our findings suggest some cases of PJI may be polymicrobial and escape detection using conventional culture. Further multi-institutional work with larger numbers and longer clinical follow-up is required for validation.


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