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General Orthopaedics

ANTIBIOTIC-LOADED CALCIUM SULFATE CEMENT USE IN ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) meeting, 32nd Annual Congress, Toronto, Canada, October 2019. Part 2 of 2.



Abstract

Purpose

Infections in orthopaedic surgery are costly, debilitating complications. The search for new treatments and prevention strategies has led to the use of antibiotic-filled calcium sulfate (CaS) as a bone void filler that is both safe and effective. The purpose of this study was to examine the available data on the efficacy of this technology.

Methods

A literature search was performed for studies that evaluated the use of antibiotic-loaded CaS cement in orthopaedics published between inception of the databases to 2017. Selected studies included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies published in the English language that met the following criteria: 1) patients underwent an orthopaedic procedure; 2) CaS cement with an antibiotic was used; and 3) at least one of our outcomes were mentioned. Outcomes included resolution of infection, complications related to treatment, subsequent surgeries, overall infection rate, fracture union rate, clinical outcomes, and wound complications. A total of 17 studies were included.

Results

Ten studies examined the use of antibiotic-eluting CaS cement with surgical debridement to treat osteomyelitis and reported resolution rates ranging from 80–100%. Two studies examined CaS for prophylaxis of infection after open fracture, with subsequent infection rates ranging from 0–22%. Two studies examined infected non-unions with CaS used as an adjunct to surgery with an 87.5% infection clearance rate. Finally, three studies examined the use of local antibiotic release from CaS in the repair of infected TKAs or THAs, with success rates ranging from 52–93.3%.

Conclusion

Initial results support the use of CaS with surgical debridement for osteomyelitis and infected non-unions. Results are mixed for CaS use in the prophylaxis of infection after open fractures and for PJIs, thereby necessitating further research. Overall the studies were small, retrospective, and lacked controls. Further research should focus on RCTs to minimize bias and investigate for non-inferiority.

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