Microorganisms (Mar 2023)

Transphyseal Hematogenous Osteomyelitis: An Epidemiological, Bacteriological, and Radiological Retrospective Cohort Analysis

  • Blaise Cochard,
  • Céline Habre,
  • Nastassia Pralong-Guanziroli,
  • Nathaly Gavira,
  • Giorgio Di Laura Frattura,
  • Giacomo Di Marco,
  • Christina N. Steiger,
  • Geraldo De Coulon,
  • Romain Dayer,
  • Dimitri Ceroni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11040894
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 894

Abstract

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Transphyseal hematogenous osteomyelitis (THO) is a serious condition that can affect the growing physis, yet it is insufficiently recognized in children. The aim of this study was to explore the prevalence and epidemiology of pediatric THO, and to discuss the underlying pathophysiology. All consecutive cases of acute and subacute osteomyelitis admitted to our institution over 17 years were retrospectively studied. Medical records were examined for patient characteristics, bacteriological etiology, and medical and surgical management. Magnetic resonance imaging was reviewed for all patients to identify those with transphyseal spread of infection. For positive cases, the surface area of the transphyseal lesion was estimated relative to the total physeal cross-sectional area. Fifty-four (25.7%) of the 210 patients admitted for acute or subacute osteomyelitis were diagnosed with THO. The study population’s ages ranged from 1 month to 14 years old (median age 5.8 years, interquartile range 1–167 months). Fourteen (25.9%) patients were younger than 18 months old; the remaining 40 (74.1%) had a mean age of 8.5 years old. The most common sites of THO were the distal tibia (29.1%), the proximal tibia (16.4%), and the distal fibula (14.5%). Transphyseal lesions were due to acute infection in 41 cases and to subacute osteomyelitis in 14 cases. The two most frequently identified pathogens were Staphylococcus aureus (49.1%) and Kingella kingae (20.0%). An average transphyseal lesion represented 8.9% of the total physeal surface, and lesions comprised more than 7% of the physeal cross-sectional area in 51% of cases. Our study revealed that pediatric THO was more frequent than commonly thought. Transphyseal lesions were frequently above this 7% cut-off, which is of paramount importance since subsequent growth is more likely to be disturbed when more than 7% of the physeal cross-sectional area is injured. THO also affected children older than 18 months, an age at which transphyseal arterial blood supply to the epiphysis is believed to have disconnected. This finding suggests another pathophysiological reason for the transphyseal diffusion of infection, a topic deserving further studies and greater understanding.

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