Bone & Joint Research (Mar 2024)

Implant retention in a rabbit model of fracture-related infection: similar infection clearance but impaired bone healing in delayed compared to early infection

  • Jan Puetzler,
  • Alejandro Vallejo Diaz,
  • Georg Gosheger,
  • Martin Schulze,
  • Daniel Arens,
  • Stephan Zeiter,
  • Claudia Siverino,
  • Robert G. Richards,
  • Thomas F. Moriarty

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1302/2046-3758.133.BJR-2023-0077.R2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
pp. 127 – 135

Abstract

Read online

Aims: Fracture-related infection (FRI) is commonly classified based on the time of onset of symptoms. Early infections ( ten weeks), guidelines recommend implant removal due to tolerant biofilms. For delayed infections (two to ten weeks), recommendations are unclear. In this study we compared infection clearance and bone healing in early and delayed FRI treated with DAIR in a rabbit model. Methods: Staphylococcus aureus was inoculated into a humeral osteotomy in 17 rabbits after plate osteosynthesis. Infection developed for one week (early group, n = 6) or four weeks (delayed group, n = 6) before DAIR (systemic antibiotics: two weeks, nafcillin + rifampin; four weeks, levofloxacin + rifampin). A control group (n = 5) received revision surgery after four weeks without antibiotics. Bacteriology of humerus, soft-tissue, and implants was performed seven weeks after revision surgery. Bone healing was assessed using a modified radiological union scale in tibial fractures (mRUST). Results: Greater bacterial burden in the early group compared to the delayed and control groups at revision surgery indicates a retraction of the infection from one to four weeks. Infection was cleared in all animals in the early and delayed groups at euthanasia, but not in the control group. Osteotomies healed in the early group, but bone healing was significantly compromised in the delayed and control groups. Conclusion: The duration of the infection from one to four weeks does not impact the success of infection clearance in this model. Bone healing, however, is impaired as the duration of the infection increases. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2024;13(3):127–135.

Keywords