Frontiers in Medicine (Oct 2022)

Development of an innovative in vivo model of PJI treated with DAIR

  • Hervé Poilvache,
  • Hervé Poilvache,
  • Hervé Poilvache,
  • Françoise Van Bambeke,
  • Olivier Cornu,
  • Olivier Cornu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.984814
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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IntroductionProsthetic Joint Infection (PJI) are catastrophic complications of joint replacement. Debridement, implant retention, and antibiotic therapy (DAIR) is the usual strategy in acute infections but fails in 45% of MRSA infections. We describe the development of a model of infected arthroplasty in rabbits, treated with debridement and a course of vancomycin with clinically relevant dosage.Materials and methodsA total of 15 rabbits were assigned to three groups: vancomycin pharmacokinetics (A), infection (B), and DAIR (C). All groups received a tibial arthroplasty using a Ti-6Al-4V implant. Groups B and C were infected per-operatively with a 5.5 log10 MRSA inoculum. After 1 week, groups C infected knees were surgically debrided. Groups A and C received 1 week of vancomycin. Pharmacokinetic profiles were obtained in group A following 1st and 5th injections. Animals were euthanized 2 weeks after the arthroplasty. Implants and tissue samples were processed for bacterial counts and histology.ResultsAverage vancomycin AUC0–12 h were 213.0 mg*h/L (1st injection) and 207.8 mg*h/L (5th injection), reaching clinical targets. All inoculated animals were infected. CFUs were reproducible in groups B. A sharp decrease in CFU was observed in groups C. Serum markers and leukocytes counts increased significantly in infected groups.ConclusionWe developed a reproducible rabbit model of PJI treated with DAIR, using vancomycin at clinically relevant concentrations.

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