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Research

CHLORHEXIDINE TRIPHOSPHATE-LOADED BONE CEMENT: HANDLING, SETTING, MECHANICAL, RELEASE, AND ANTIMICROBIAL PROPERTIES

The 29th Annual Meeting of the European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS), Rome, Italy, 15–17 September 2021.



Abstract

Introduction and Objective

The continued effectiveness of antibiotic loaded bone cements is threatened by antibiotic resistance. The common antiseptic, chlorhexidine (CHX), is a potential alternative to antibiotics in bone cements, but conventional salts are highly soluble, causing burst release and rapid decline to subinhibitory local CHX concentrations. Here, chlorhexidine triphosphate (CHX-TP), a low solubility CHX salt, is investigated as an alternative antimicrobial in PMMA bone cements. The aim was to assess duration of antimicrobial release and antimicrobial efficacy, along with handling, setting and mechanical properties of CHX-TP loaded cements, compared with an existing cement formulation containing gentamicin.

Materials and Methods

Palacos R (Heraeus Medical, Newbury, UK) with 0, 1, 4, 7 and 12% CHX-TP (w/w) cements were prepared by combining solid CHX-TP with Palacos R components, and compared with Palacos R+G. All cements were prepared without vacuum and under ISO 5833:2002 conditions. Cements were tested under ISO 5833:2002 for compressive and bending properties, setting time, maximum temperature and doughing time. Antimicrobial release from the cements into deionised water was studied and antimicrobial efficacy of unaged and aged cements against Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 29213) was assessed using a disc diffusion assay.

Results

Compressive strength of CHX-TP loaded cements was not significantly different to Palacos R or Palacos R+G (p > 0.05, all exceeding ISO 5833:2002 minimum of 70 MPa). Mean bending strength was significantly lower with CHX-TP loading (p < 0.05) than bending strength of Palacos R and Palacos R+G, though all bending moduli exceeded the ISO 5833:2002 minimum (1800 MPa). All cements studied were within the ISO 5833:2002 limits for setting time (3 to 15 min), doughing time (≤ 5 min) and maximum temperature (90 oC). Mean doughing time for Palacos R, Palacos R+G and Palacos R + 12 % CHX-TP respectively: 52.5 s, 45 s and 45 s. Mean setting time and mean maximum temperature for Palacos R, Palacos R+G and Palacos R + 1, 4, 7 and 12% CHX-TP respectively: 11.00 min (73 oC), 11.25 min (72 oC), 12.25 min (66 oC), 10.50 min (70 oC), 10.00 min (70 oC), 10.75 min (62 oC). Sustained CHX release into deionised water was observed from all Palacos R + CHX-TP cements. Duration varied according to CHX-TP dosing and diminished over time, although to an extent that itself varied with dosing. 1 % CHX-TP ceased releasing CHX at 6.9 weeks; 4 % CHX-TP ceased at 67.7 weeks; 7 % and 12 % CHX-TP were ongoing at 75.5 weeks. Palacos R+G cements ceased releasing detectable levels of gentamicin after 14.4 weeks. Palacos R+G and Palacos R + CHX-TP cement discs showed efficacy against S. aureus (ATCC 29213) when applied as prepared (unaged) to S. aureus bacterial lawns in disc diffusion assays, with CHX-TP cements showing dose dependency. Zone of inhibition (ZOI) size was significantly reduced for Palacos R+G cements and Palacos R + 1% CHX-TP cements after 1 week and 6 weeks aging, compared to ZOI from unaged cements (p < 0.05). ZOI size produced by Palacos R + 4, 7, and 12 % CHX-TP cements did not decline significantly after 6 weeks aging (p > 0.05).

Conclusions

CHX-TP can be incorporated into the Palacos R cement matrix up to 12% w/w without deterioration of compressive strength, bending modulus, doughing time, setting time or maximum temperature. Bending strength was significantly reduced at all CHX-TP loadings studied. Palacos R + 4, 7 and 12% CHX-TP cements provided sustained CHX release, exceeding the duration of gentamicin release from Palacos R+G, and showed sustained efficacy against S. Aureus after 6 weeks aging, which was not achieved by Palacos R+G cements.


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