Relationship between intraoperative cultures during hip arthroplasty, obesity, and the risk of early prosthetic joint infection: a prospective study of 428 patients.
キーワード
概要
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the relationship between intraoperative cultures during hip arthroplasty, the different patient characteristics, and the risk of developing a prosthetic joint infection (PJI).
METHODS
A prospective observational study was performed. Patients who underwent elective THA from March 2007 to March of 2011 were included. Three samples were taken just after arthrotomy: synovial fluid inoculated into blood culture flasks (SF), a tissue sample (TS), and a swab of peri- prosthetic tissue (S). Patients received standard antibiotic prophylaxis. The PJI rate within the first 3 months after arthroplasty was recorded.
RESULTS
402 prostheses were included in the study. Contamination rate of synovial fluid was 10.2%. The most frequent isolated microorganism was coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) (32 out of 41). Body mass index (BMI) was the only host characteristic associated with positive intraoperative culture (p=0.009). The PJI rate was 3.7%. Variables associated with PJI in the univariate and multivariate analysis were: age =67 years (p=0.012 OR: 5.35 (1.45-19.81); CI95%) and a BMI =35 (p=0.002, OR: 7.7 (2.12-27.85) CI95%). PJI rate among patients with BMI<35 with negative and positive intraoperative cultures was 3% and 2.7%, respectively, however, the rate among patients with BMI = 35 was 15% and 25%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
A BMI =35 was associated with a higher risk of positive intraoperative culture during hip arthroplasty. In addition, a BMI ≥35 was independently associated with a high risk of PJI and the highest rate was documented among obese patients with positive intraoperative cultures.