| Literature DB >> 29623671 |
Setor K Kunutsor1,2, Michael R Whitehouse3,4, Ashley W Blom3,4, Tim Board5, Peter Kay5, B Mike Wroblewski5, Valérie Zeller6, Szu-Yuan Chen7, Pang-Hsin Hsieh7, Bassam A Masri8, Amir Herman8, Jean-Yves Jenny9, Ran Schwarzkopf10, John-Paul Whittaker11, Ben Burston11, Ronald Huang12, Camilo Restrepo12, Javad Parvizi12, Sergio Rudelli13,14, Emerson Honda13,14, David E Uip13,14, Guillem Bori15, Ernesto Muñoz-Mahamud15, Elizabeth Darley16, Alba Ribera17, Elena Cañas18, Javier Cabo18, José Cordero-Ampuero19, Maria Luisa Sorlí Redó20, Simon Strange3, Erik Lenguerrand3, Rachael Gooberman-Hill3, Jason Webb21, Alasdair MacGowan16, Paul Dieppe22, Matthew Wilson23, Andrew D Beswick3.
Abstract
One-stage and two-stage revision strategies are the two main options for treating established chronic peri-prosthetic joint infection (PJI) of the hip; however, there is uncertainty regarding which is the best treatment option. We aimed to compare the risk of re-infection between the two revision strategies using pooled individual participant data (IPD). Observational cohort studies with PJI of the hip treated exclusively by one- or two-stage revision and reporting re-infection outcomes were retrieved by searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, and the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform; as well as email contact with investigators. We analysed IPD of 1856 participants with PJI of the hip from 44 cohorts across four continents. The primary outcome was re-infection (recurrence of infection by the same organism(s) and/or re-infection with a new organism(s)). Hazard ratios (HRs) for re-infection were calculated using Cox proportional frailty hazards models. After a median follow-up of 3.7 years, 222 re-infections were recorded. Re-infection rates per 1000 person-years of follow-up were 16.8 (95% CI 13.6-20.7) and 32.3 (95% CI 27.3-38.3) for one-stage and two-stage strategies respectively. The age- and sex-adjusted HR of re-infection for two-stage revision was 1.70 (0.58-5.00) when compared with one-stage revision. The association remained consistently absent after further adjustment for potential confounders. The HRs did not vary importantly in clinically relevant subgroups. Analysis of pooled individual patient data suggest that a one-stage revision strategy may be as effective as a two-stage revision strategy in treating PJI of the hip.Entities:
Keywords: Meta-analysis; One-stage; Prosthesis related infection; Re-infection; Reoperation; Revision; Total hip replacement; Two-stage
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29623671 PMCID: PMC6153557 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-018-0377-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082
Fig. 1Selection of studies included in the individual pooled data analysis
Summary of baseline characteristics and follow-up data in patients undergoing one- or two-stage revision
| Overall | One-stage revision | Two-stage revision | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of participants | 1856 | 884 | 972 | |
| Socio-demographic characteristics | ||||
| Gender | N = 1743 | N = 864 | N = 879 | 0.922 |
| Males, n (%) | 926 (53.1) | 458 (53.0) | 468 (53.2) | |
| Females, n (%) | 817 (46.9) | 406 (47.0) | 411 (46.8) | |
| Age at baseline (years), mean (SD) | 65.1 (13.0) | 66.8 (12.4) | 63.4 (13.3) | < 0.001 |
| Smoking | N = 365 | N = 56 | N = 309 | 0.151 |
| Yes, n (%) | 86 (23.6) | 9 (16.1) | 77 (24.9) | |
| No, n (%) | 279 (76.4) | 47 (83.9) | 232 (75.1) | |
| History of high alcohol consumption | N = 110 | N = 0 | N = 110 | |
| Yes, n (%) | 6 (5.5) | 6 (5.5) | ||
| No, n (%) | 104 (94.6) | 104 (94.6) | ||
| Physical measurements | ||||
| N = 631 | N = 269 | N = 362 | ||
| Body mass index in kg/m2, mean (SD) | 27.6 (6.6) | 27.5 (5.9) | 27.8 (7.0) | 0.580 |
| Medical and surgical history | ||||
| History of diabetes | N = 803 | N = 282 | N = 521 | 0.028 |
| Yes, n (%) | 131 (16.3) | 35 (12.4) | 96 (18.4) | |
| No, n (%) | 676 (83.7) | 247 (87.6) | 425 (81.6) | |
| History of hypertension | N = 340 | N = 157 | N = 183 | 0.501 |
| Yes, n (%) | 119 (35.0) | 52 (33.1) | 67 (36.6) | |
| No, n (%) | 221 (65.0) | 105 (66.9) | 116 (63.4) | |
| History of CVD | N = 403 | N = 161 | N = 242 | 0.714 |
| Yes, n (%) | 99 (24.6) | 38 (23.6) | 61 (25.2) | |
| No, n (%) | 304 (75.4) | 123 (76.4) | 181 (74.8) | |
| Comorbidity index | N = 785 | N = 282 | N = 503 | < 0.001 |
| No previously recorded disease categories, n (%) | 256 (32.6) | 45 (16.0) | 211 (42.0) | |
| One or two disease categories, n (%) | 433 (55.2) | 212 (75.2) | 221 (43.9) | |
| More than two disease categories, n (%) | 96 (12.2) | 25 (8.9) | 71 (14.1) | |
| History of previous PJI | N = 321 | N = 120 | N = 201 | < 0.001 |
| Yes, n (%) | 62 (19.3) | 47 (39.2) | 15 (7.5) | |
| No, n (%) | 259 (80.7) | 73 (60.8) | 186 (92.5) | |
| Previous hip surgery | N = 1060 | N = 809 | N = 251 | < 0.001 |
| Yes, n (%) | 825 (77.8) | 748 (92.5) | 77 (30.7) | |
| No, n (%) | 235 (22.2) | 61 (7.5) | 174 (69.3) | |
| Hip involved in index implantation | N = 1233 | N = 632 | N = 601 | 0.863 |
| Right, n (%) | 676 (54.8) | 348 (55.1) | 328 (54.6) | |
| Left, n (%) | 557 (45.2) | 284 (44.9) | 273 (45.4) | |
| Characteristics of infection before revision procedure | ||||
| Previous procedure performed to treat infection | N = 541 | N = 277 | N = 264 | 0.977 |
| Yes, n (%) | 137 (25.3) | 70 (25.3) | 67 (25.4) | |
| No, n (%) | 404 (74.7) | 207 (74.7) | 197 (74.6) | |
| Presence of abscess, sinus, draining wound, or fistula at presentation | N = 588 | N = 278 | N = 310 | 0.035 |
| Yes, n (%) | 160 (27.2) | 87 (31.3) | 73 (23.6) | |
| No, n (%) | 428 (72.8) | 191 (68.7) | 237 (76.5) | |
| Time from index implantation to infection (weeks), median (IQR) | 102.7 (36.6–299.2) | 154.3 (51.4–350.1) | 102.6 (32.6–268.5) | 0.142 |
| Time from infection to revision procedure (weeks), median (IQR) | 20.6 (8.4–51.4) | 30.0 (10.2–94.2) | 12.9 (6.4–34.3) | < 0.001 |
| Baseline data before revision | ||||
| C-reactive protein (mg/l), [N] median (IQR) | [680] 18.9 (6.1–54.0) | [248] 22.5 (9.0–56.5) | [432] 17.1 (5.8–50.5) | 0.052 |
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (mm/h), [N] median (IQR) | [371] 47 (26–73) | [70] 41 (28–55) | [301] 51 (25–76) | 0.114 |
| Neutrophils/µl, [N] median (IQR) | [69] 4520 (2800–6000) | [23] 4800 (4100–6000) | [46] 3835 (99–5980) | 0.044 |
| WBC/µl, [N] median (IQR) | [285] 7380 (6020–9090) | [178] 7100 (5920–8580) | [107] 8030 (6630–10860) | 0.002 |
| Harris Hip Score, [N] median (IQR) | [171] 55.0 (48.0–60.0) | [12] 55.5 (43.5–63.5) | [159] 55–0 (48·0–60.0) | 0.656 |
| Characteristics of revision procedure and management | ||||
| Type of re-implantation | N = 122 | N = 89 | N = 33 | 0.201 |
| Cemented, n (%) | 91 (74.6) | 65 (73.0) | 26 (78.8) | |
| Cementless, n (%) | 23 (18.9) | 16 (18.0) | 7 (21.2) | |
| Hybrid, n (%) | 8 (6.6) | 8 (9.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Antibiotics in cement | N = 1092 | N = 758 | N = 334 | < 0.001 |
| Yes, n (%) | 750 (68.7) | 584 (77.0) | 166 (49.7) | |
| No, n (%) | 342 (31.3) | 174 (23.0) | 168 (50.3) | |
| Nature of spacer used | – | – | N = 293 | |
| Unknown, n (%) | – | – | 2 (0.7) | |
| Articulated, n (%) | – | – | 287 (98.0) | |
| Static, n (%) | – | – | 4 (1.4) | |
| Type of spacer | – | N = 183 | ||
| Unknown, n (%) | – | – | 1 (0.6) | |
| Handmade, n (%) | – | – | 167 (91.3) | |
| Commercial, n (%) | – | – | 15 (8.2) | |
| Antibiotics in spacer | – | – | N = 183 | |
| Yes, n (%) | – | 180 (98.4) | ||
| No, n (%) | – | 3 (1.6) | ||
| Duration between stages (weeks), median (IQR) | – | – | 14.5 (11.0–24.0) | |
| Duration of antibiotics use between stages (weeks), median (IQR) | – | – | 24.0 (4.5–24.0) | |
| After revision (follow-up) | ||||
| Duration of antibiotic use after revision surgery (weeks), median (IQR) | 12.1 (6.1–12.6) | 12.6 (12.0–12.6) | 1.3 (0.5–5.5) | < 0.001 |
| Duration of follow-up (years), median (IQR) | 3.7 (2.0–6.9) | 4.2 (2.0–8.1) | 3.3 (2.0–5.9) | < 0.001 |
| Harris Hip Score at follow up, median (IQR) | 86.0 (73.0–93.0) | 80.0 (52.0–90.0) | 87.0 (78.0–95.0) | 0.003 |
| Number of re-infections | 222 | 88 | 134 | |
CVD cardiovascular disease, IQR interquartile range, MR methicillin resistant, MS methicillin sensitive, PJI periprosthetic joint infection, SD standard deviation, WBC white blood cells
Fig. 2Indications for index implantation by type of revision strategy
Fig. 3Type of infecting microorganism after index implantation by type of revision strategy
Fig. 4Cumulative hazard curves for re-infection by type of revision strategy
Hazard ratios for re-infection comparing two-stage revision versus one-stage revision adjusted progressively for risk factors
| Model | Hazard ratio (95% CI) | Hazard ratio (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1038 participants | 439 participants | |||
| Model 1 | 1.69 (0.58–4.98) | 0.338 | 1.65 (0.44–6·20) | 0.460 |
| Model 2 | 1.70 (0.58–5.00) | 0.332 | 1.66 (0.44–6·24) | 0.454 |
| Model 3 | 1.33 (0.48–3.69) | 0.583 | 1.57 (0.45–5·51) | 0.484 |
| Model 4 | – | – | 1.59 (0.39–6·55) | 0.520 |
| Model 5 | – | – | 1.71 (0.39–7·50) | 0.479 |
Model 1: adjusted for age
Model 2: model 1 plus sex
Model 3: model 2 plus previous hip surgery other than index surgery (yes/no)
Model 4: model 3 plus Charlson comorbidity index (no previous disease/one or two disease categories/more than two disease categories)
Model 5: model 4 plus difficult to treat organism (yes/no)
Fig. 5Hazard ratios for re-infection by participant level characteristics. Hazard ratios were adjusted for age, sex, previous hip surgery other than index surgery (yes/no), and difficult to treat organism (yes/no); CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio; *P value for interaction. Analysis was limited to 495 participants (comprising 48 re-infections) with available data