Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2019)

The Different Microbial Etiology of Prosthetic Joint Infections according to Route of Acquisition and Time after Prosthesis Implantation, Including the Role of Multidrug-Resistant Organisms

  • Natividad Benito,
  • Isabel Mur,
  • Alba Ribera,
  • Alex Soriano,
  • Dolors Rodríguez-Pardo,
  • Luisa Sorlí,
  • Javier Cobo,
  • Marta Fernández-Sampedro,
  • María Dolores del Toro,
  • Laura Guío,
  • Julia Praena,
  • Alberto Bahamonde,
  • Melchor Riera,
  • Jaime Esteban,
  • Josu Mirena Baraia-Etxaburu,
  • Jesús Martínez-Alvarez,
  • Alfredo Jover-Sáenz,
  • Carlos Dueñas,
  • Antonio Ramos,
  • Beatriz Sobrino,
  • Gorane Euba,
  • Laura Morata,
  • Carles Pigrau,
  • Juan P. Horcajada,
  • Pere Coll,
  • Xavier Crusi,
  • Javier Ariza,
  • on behalf of the REIPI (Spanish Network for Research in Infectious Disease) Group for the Study of Prosthetic Joint Infections/GEIO (Group for the Study of Osteoarticular Infections), SEIMC (Spanish Society of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8050673
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. 673

Abstract

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The aim of our study was to characterize the etiology of prosthetic joint infections (PJIs)—including multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO)—by category of infection. A multicenter study of 2544 patients with PJIs was performed. We analyzed the causative microorganisms according to the Tsukayama’s scheme (early postoperative, late chronic, and acute hematogenous infections (EPI, LCI, AHI) and “positive intraoperative cultures” (PIC)). Non-hematogenous PJIs were also evaluated according to time since surgery: <1 month, 2–3 months, 4–12 months, >12 months. AHIs were mostly caused by Staphylococcus aureus (39.2%) and streptococci (30.2%). EPIs were characterized by a preponderance of virulent microorganisms (S. aureus, Gram-negative bacilli (GNB), enterococci), MDROs (24%) and polymicrobial infections (27.4%). Conversely, coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) and Cutibacterium species were predominant in LCIs (54.5% and 6.1%, respectively) and PICs (57.1% and 15.1%). The percentage of MDROs isolated in EPIs was more than three times the percentage isolated in LCIs (7.8%) and more than twice the proportion found in AHI (10.9%). There was a significant decreasing linear trend over the four time intervals post-surgery for virulent microorganisms, MDROs, and polymicrobial infections, and a rising trend for CoNS, streptococci and Cutibacterium spp. The observed differences have important implications for the empirical antimicrobial treatment of PJIs.

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