| Literature DB >> 30683987 |
Alberto Signore1,2, Luca Maria Sconfienza3,4, Olivier Borens5, Andor W J M Glaudemans6, Victor Cassar-Pullicino7, Andrej Trampuz8, Heinz Winkler9, Olivier Gheysens10, Filip M H M Vanhoenacker11, Nicola Petrosillo12, Paul C Jutte13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For the diagnosis of prosthetic joint infection, real evidence-based guidelines to aid clinicians in choosing the most accurate diagnostic strategy are lacking. AIM AND METHODS: To address this need, we performed a multidisciplinary systematic review of relevant nuclear medicine, radiological, orthopaedic, infectious, and microbiological literature to define the diagnostic accuracy of each diagnostic technique and to address and provide evidence-based answers on uniform statements for each topic that was found to be important to develop a commonly agreed upon diagnostic flowchart. RESULTS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Guideline; Imaging; Infection diagnosis; Prosthetic joint infection
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30683987 PMCID: PMC6450843 DOI: 10.1007/s00259-019-4263-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ISSN: 1619-7070 Impact factor: 9.236
Fig. 1The suggested initial diagnostic steps to undertake in the case of suspicion of a PJI, based on published evidence. Some tests can be repeated (i.e. blood cultures, bone biopsies, or soft tissue biopsies). Serological tests (CRP, WBC count with differential, and ESR) should be performed over time, since the overall increasing or decreasing trend is more important than a single value. The choice of an advanced diagnostic test depends on availability, costs, radiation burden, and operator experience (see Tables 1 and 2). Synovial biomarkers and cultures can be better performed after sonication of tissue samples. They have high accuracy for infection but need to be integrated with advanced imaging modalities to study the bone and soft tissue status and the extent and severity of the infection
Fig. 2The suggested path to undertake when nuclear medicine procedures are considered for suspicion of a PJI, based on published evidence and expert opinion. Initial stratification is based on time after implant (more or less than 2 years). This is particularly true for hip and shoulder prostheses, but knee prosthesis may require up to 5 years post-implant to reduce physiological inflammation. Some differences may also depend on the type of prosthesis (cemented or not), with cemented prostheses having a shorter post-implant time for physiological inflammatory reaction. 1FDG-PET has higher sensitivity than specificity, mainly because of false-positive inflammatory uptake in the case of aseptic loosening and/or recent surgery. This is why it is better to exclude an infective process in chronic painful joints. Nevertheless, despite the lack of standardized image interpretation criteria available, FDG-PET has also been proposed in early acute phases of infections. 2WBC scan has higher sensitivity and specificity than AGA scan, FDG-PET, and MRI, and is preferred when available and indicated for the patient. The methodology for these nuclear medicine scans is extremely important (usually by acquiring three sets of images corrected for isotope decay), and we refer to the procedural guidelines published by the EANM Committee on Infection/Inflammation. It can be combined with bone marrow scintigraphy to further increase specificity
Advanced radiological techniques
| Ultrasound | Computed tomography | Magnetic resonance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pros | May be useful in monitoring soft tissue extension of infection and for soft tissue biopsies | Needed as a guide for bone biopsy | High diagnostic accuracy using new sequences without interference from the prosthesis |
| Cons | Low sensitivity and specificity for bone infection | Possible striking artefacts due to the metal nature of prosthesis | Peri-implant edema may occasionally suggest false-positive findings |
Advanced nuclear medicine techniques
| 99mTc-MDP/HDP bone scan | 99mTc-anti-granulocyte scan (IgG/Fab AGA) | 99mTc-HMPAO/111In-oxine-WBC scan | [18F]FDG-PET/CT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pros | High sensitivity | High sensitivity and specificity; however, generally lower than for WBC scan | High sensitivity and specificity | High sensitivity |
| Cons | Low specificity | Possible contraindications for IgG and HAMA induction | Moderate radiation exposure | Low specificity |