Prior Use of Antimicrobial Therapy is a Risk Factor for Culture-negative Prosthetic Joint Infection

Authors/contributors
Abstract
Background Clinical characteristics and control of the infection of patients with culture-negative (CN) prosthetic joint infection (PJI) have not been well assessed. Prior use of antimicrobial therapy has been speculated but not proven as a risk factor for CNPJI. Questions/purposes We therefore determined whether prior use of antimicrobial therapy, prior PJI, and postoperative wound healing complications were associated with CN PJI. Methods We performed a retrospective case-control study of 135 patients with CN PJI treated between January 1, 1985, and December 31, 2000 matched with 135 patients with culture-positive (CP) PJIs (control patients) during the study period. The time to failure of therapy compared between cases and control patients using a Kaplan-Meier analysis. Results The use of prior antimicrobial therapy and postoperative wound drainage after index arthroplasty were associated with increased odds of PJI being culture-negative (odds ratio, 4.7; 95% CI, 2.8-8.1 and odds ratio, 3.5; 95% CI, 1.5-8.1, respectively). The percent (± SE) cumulative incidence free of treatment failure at 2 years followup was similar for CN and CP PJI: 75% (± 4%) and 79% (± 4%), respectively. Conclusions Prior antimicrobial therapy and postoperative wound drainage were associated with an increased risk of negative cultures among patients with PJI. Physicians should critically evaluate the need for antimicrobial therapy before establishing a microbiologic diagnosis of PJI in patients with suspected PJI.
Publication
Clinical Orthopaedics & Related Research
Date
08/2010
Notes

This retrospective case-control study included 135 patients with CN PJI seen between January 1, 1985, and December 31, 2000. Control patients were selected from 1278 patients with CP PJI seen at the same institution during the same time period.

Key findings:

  1. The study aimed to identify risk factors associated with culture-negative PJI, with a specific focus on the use of prior antimicrobial therapy, and to compare therapeutic modalities and the incidence free of treatment failure between cases of culture-negative and culture-positive PJI.
  2. Findings included that antimicrobial therapy within the 3 months before the diagnosis of PJI was associated with an increased risk of culture-negative PJI. Postoperative wound drainage was also identified as a risk factor for culture-negative PJI.

Clinical implications:

  1. Use of prior antimicrobial therapy is a cause of culture negative PJI

Strengths:

  1. Number of included patients
  2. Case and control patients were from the same medical center limiting differences in surgical technique and management

Limitations:

  1. Retrospective study
  2. Inclusion of different surgical strategies

Level of evidence: Low (retrospective)

Citation
1.
Malekzadeh D, Osmon DR, Lahr BD, Hanssen AD, Berbari EF. Prior Use of Antimicrobial Therapy is a Risk Factor for Culture-negative Prosthetic Joint Infection. Clinical Orthopaedics & Related Research. 2010;468(8):2039-2045.