| Literature DB >> 31002056 |
Genevieve L Buser, Matthew R Laidler, P Maureen Cassidy, Heather Moulton-Meissner, Zintars G Beldavs, Paul R Cieslak.
Abstract
We investigated a cluster of Mycobacterium fortuitum and M. goodii prosthetic joint surgical site infections occurring during 2010-2014. Cases were defined as culture-positive nontuberculous mycobacteria surgical site infections that had occurred within 1 year of joint replacement surgery performed on or after October 1, 2010. We identified 9 cases by case finding, chart review, interviews, surgical observations, matched case-control study, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of isolates, and environmental investigation; 6 cases were diagnosed >90 days after surgery. Cases were associated with a surgical instrument vendor representative being in the operating room during surgery; other potential sources were ruled out. A tenth case occurred during 2016. This cluster of infections associated with a vendor reinforces that all personnel entering the operating suite should follow infection control guidelines; samples for mycobacterial culture should be collected early; and postoperative surveillance for <90 days can miss surgical site infections caused by slow-growing organisms requiring specialized cultures, like mycobacteria.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium fortuitum; Mycobacterium goodii; National Healthcare Safety Network; Oregon; USA; arthroplasty; bacteria; case–control studies; environment; hair; hip joint; humans; infection control; knee joint; nontuberculous mycobacteria; prostheses and implants; pulsed-field gel electrophoresis; replacement; soil; surgical wound infection; tuberculosis and other mycobacteria; water
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31002056 PMCID: PMC6478192 DOI: 10.3201/eid2505.181687
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics of 9 nontuberculous mycobacterial knee and hip prosthetic joint SSIs at multiple hospitals, Oregon, 2010–2014*
| Case no. | Prosthesis type | Procedure year | SSI type | Time to SSI, d† | SSI to culture, d‡ | Time to culture, d§ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hip | 2010 | Unknown |
| 157 | 0 | 157 |
| 2 | Hip | 2010 | Organ space |
| 35 | 35 | 70 |
| 3 | Knee | 2013 | Deep incision |
| 70 | 22 | 92 |
| 4 | Knee | 2013 | Superficial incisional |
| 85 | 0 | 85 |
| 5 | Hip | 2013 | Organ space |
| 78 | 54 | 132 |
| 6 | Knee | 2013 | Organ space |
| 69 | 34 | 103 |
| 7 | Knee | 2013 | Organ space |
| 69 | 30 | 99 |
| 8 | Hip | 2014 | Suture abscess |
| 86 | 14 | 100 |
| 9 | Hip | 2014 | Organ space |
| 83 | 1 | 84 |
*SSI identification date: National Health Safety Network event date, or chart review, or specimen culture collection date. Case 10 not included in analysis. SSI, surgical site infection. †From time of surgery to SSI identification date. Median 78 d. ‡From time of SSI identification to mycobacterial specimen culture collection date. Median 22 d. §From time of surgery to mycobacterial specimen culture collection date. Median 99 d.
Figure 1Time interval definitions used in investigation of mycobacterial prosthetic joint surgical site infections, Oregon, USA, 2010–2016. SSI, surgical site infection.
Figure 2Time intervals between knee and hip prosthetic joint surgery to collection of surgical site mycobacterial cultures yielding related nontuberculous mycobacteria, multiple hospitals, Oregon, 2010–2014 (n = 9). Numbers indicate total number of days from surgery (black dots) to culture collection (gray dots). Case 10 is not included.
Figure 3Dendrogram of 8 Mycobacterium fortuitum isolates associated with prosthetic joint surgical site infections, multiple hospitals, Oregon, 2013–2016. Boxes indicate group relatedness according to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis: solid lines, indistinguishable (no band difference); dashed lines, closely related (1–3 band difference); dotted lines, possibly related (4–6 band difference). Differences of >7 bands indicate not related. Rep, representative.