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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 4 - 4
24 Nov 2023
Gómez-Junyent J Redó MLS Pelegrín I Millat-Martínez P Pérez-Prieto D Alier A Verdié LP Poblet J Pardos SL Montero MM Horcajada JP
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Aim

Prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is a devastating complication of joint replacement, having an impact on morbimortality but also on national health systems and their budgets. The current situation of PJI-related hospitalizations in Spain and their changes over time are unknown. Therefore, we aimed to analyze the hospitalization burden of PJI, including costs and trends in recent decades.

Methods

Retrospective observational study including data from the National Surveillance System for Hospital Data, which includes more than 98% of Spanish hospitals. During the period 2000–2015, hospitalizations due to PJI (ICD-9-CM 996.66) as main diagnosis were included. Epidemiological trends were evaluated during four periods: P1, 2000–2003; P2, 2004–2007; P3, 2008–2011; P4, 2012–2015. Annual hospitalization rates per 100,000 inhabitants and trends were also calculated.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 80 - 80
24 Nov 2023
Rojas-Sayol R Pardos SL No LR Perez CB Redó MLS Pérez-Prieto D
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Aim

The use of bone substitutes such as calcium sulfate (CaSO4) and hydroxyapatite with local antibiotics are crucial in the treatment of osteomyelitis. They allow the treatment of the dead space and locally provide large concentrations of antibiotics. However, it is unknown whether use of local vancomycin may elute and influence on vancomycin plasma levels. The aim of this study is to assess whether the addition of vancomycin to CaSO4 with hydroxyapatite may increase vancomycin plasma concentrations in in patients with osteomyelitis and therefore alter dosage adjustments.

Method

The present study investigates the vancomycin plasma concentrations at 72–94 h post-surgery after the application of local vancomycin within CaSO4 (660mg vancomycin/10cc) and hydroxyapatite bone substitute in patients treated with empiric intravenous vancomycin and surgically treated for osteomyelitis.

Vancomycin plasma concentrations were analyzed in twelve patients with osteomyelitis surgically treated with local release of vancomycin by CaSO4 and hydroxyapatite and undergoing therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) of their vancomycin plasma concentrations as it is routinely done in our hospital. From 2019 to 2022, demographic data, microbiology, type of osteomyelitis, amount of local vancomycin applied, alteration of renal function, and vancomycin levels were retrospectively analyzed.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 50 - 50
1 Oct 2022
Pardos SL No LR Arderiu A Redó MLS Prieto DP Junyent JG Verdie LP Fabrego AA Prim N Cerrato SG
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Aim

Vancomycin is frequently used for bone and joint infections (BJI) because of the main role of Gram-positive bacteria as potential causal agents. It is crucial to achieve optimal vancomycin plasma concentrations since the first day to maximize treatment clinical and microbiological efficacy. The aim was to describe the patients’ profile that are more likely to achieve an optimal pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) vancomycin target in the first therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) sample.

Methods

Retrospective study (March 2018-January 2022) in a university hospital including all patients treated with vancomycin for a BJI and undergoing TDM. Initial dose (1g/8-12h) was selected by the responsible clinician. Vancomycin plasma concentrations were obtained pre-dose (Cmin,ss) and 60-minutes after the infusion on day 2 of treatment. Global exposure measured by the area under the curve of plasma concentrations during 24h (AUC024h) was estimated using a bicompartmental PK model.

An AUC024h/CMI=400–600mg*h/L was considered optimal, <400 infratherapeutic and >600 supratherapeutic, based on recent guidelines, and patients were classified into these 3 groups. A value of CMI=1 mg/L was considered, following guidelines recommendations.

Categorial data: percentages and quantitative data as mean (standard deviation).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 12 - 12
1 Oct 2022
Fes AF Leal AC Alier A Pardos SL Redó MLS Verdié LP Diaz SM Pérez-Prieto D
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Aim

The most frequent mechanical failure in the osteosynthesis of intertrochanteric fractures is the cut-out. Fracture pattern, reduction quality, tip-apex distance or the position of the cervico-cephalic screw are some of the factors that have been associated with higher cut-out rates. To date, it has not been established whether underlying bacterial colonization or concomitant infection may be the cause of osteosynthesis failure in proximal femur fractures (PFF). The primary objective of this study is to assess the incidence of infection in patients with cut-out after PFF osteosynthesis.

Method

Retrospective cohort study on patients with cut-out after PFF osteosynthesis with endomedullary nail, from January 2007 to December 2020. Demographic data of patients (such as sex, age, ASA), fracture characteristics (pattern, laterality, causal mechanism) and initial surgery parameters were collected (time from fall to intervention, duration of surgery, intraoperative complications). Radiographic parameters were also analyzed (tip-apex distance and Chang criteria). In all cut-out cases, 5 microbiological cultures and 1 anatomopathological sample were taken and the osteosynthesis material was sent for sonication. Fracture-related infection (FRI) was diagnosed based on Metsemakers et al (2018) and McNally et al (2020) diagnostic criteria.