2020 Mark Coventry Award: Microorganism-directed oral antibiotics reduce the rate of failure due to further infection after two-stage revision hip or knee arthroplasty for chronic infection: a multicentre randomized controlled trial at a minimum of two years

Authors/contributors
Abstract
Aims The aim of this study was to determine if a three-month course of microorganism-directed oral antibiotics reduces the rate of failure due to further infection following two-stage revision for chronic prosthetic joint infection (PJI) of the hip and knee. Methods A total of 185 patients undergoing a two-stage revision in seven different centres were prospectively enrolled. Of these patients, 93 were randomized to receive microorganism-directed oral antibiotics for three months following reimplantation; 88 were randomized to receive no antibiotics, and four were withdrawn before randomization. Of the 181 randomized patients, 28 were lost to follow-up, six died before two years follow-up, and five with culture negative infections were excluded. The remaining 142 patients were followed for a mean of 3.3 years (2.0 to 7.6) with failure due to a further infection as the primary endpoint. Patients who were treated with antibiotics were also assessed for their adherence to the medication regime and for side effects to antibiotics. Results Nine of 72 patients (12.5%) who received antibiotics failed due to further infection compared with 20 of 70 patients (28.6%) who did not receive antibiotics (p = 0.012). Five patients (6.9%) in the treatment group experienced adverse effects related to the administered antibiotics severe enough to warrant discontinuation. Conclusion This multicentre randomized controlled trial showed that a three-month course of microorganism-directed, oral antibiotics significantly reduced the rate of failure due to further infection following a two-stage revision of total hip or knee arthroplasty for chronic PJI. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2020;102-B(6 Supple A):3–9.
Publication
The Bone & Joint Journal
Date
06/2020
Notes

Key question: Does a 3-month course of microorganism-directed oral antibiotics after two-stage revision arthroplasty for prosthetic joint infection reduce the rate of failure due to further infection compared to no antibiotics?

Findings:

  • In the intention-to-treat analysis, the antibiotic group had a significantly lower failure rate due to further infection compared to the control group (12.5% vs 28.6%, p=0.012).
  • In the per-protocol analysis, the antibiotic group also had a lower failure rate than the control group (12.7% vs 28.6%, p=0.017).
  • No significant differences were found between groups in patient demographics, comorbidities, or type of spacer used.

Clinical implications:

  • A 3-month course of organism-specific oral antibiotics after two-stage revision arthroplasty appears effective in reducing further infections, compared to no antibiotics.
  • Post-operative oral antibiotics could be considered as part of treatment to reduce risk of failure due to infection in these patients.

Strengths:

  • Multicenter, randomized controlled trial design
  • Primary outcome of failure due to further infection is clinically important
  • Per-protocol analysis in addition to intention-to-treat analysis
  • Mean 3.3 years follow-up

Limitations:

  • Lack of blinding of patients and clinicians
  • Did not meet target sample size due to exclusions
  • Only included patients with negative cultures at reimplantation
  • No placebo control group
  • Heterogeneous surgical techniques across centers
Citation
1.
Yang J, Parvizi J, Hansen EN, et al. 2020 Mark Coventry Award: Microorganism-directed oral antibiotics reduce the rate of failure due to further infection after two-stage revision hip or knee arthroplasty for chronic infection: a multicentre randomized controlled trial at a minimum of two years. The Bone & Joint Journal. 2020;102-B(6_Supple_A):3-9.