| Literature DB >> 31997412 |
Edward M Schwarz1, Alex C McLaren2, Thomas P Sculco3, Barry Brause4, Mathias Bostrom3, Stephen L Kates5, Javad Parvizi6, Volker Alt7, William V Arnold6, Alberto Carli3, Antonia F Chen8, Hyonmin Choe9, Débora C Coraça-Huber10, Michael Cross3, Michelle Ghert11, Noreen Hickok12, Jessica Amber Jennings13, Manjari Joshi14, Willem-Jan Metsemakers15, Mark Ninomiya1, Kohei Nishitani16, Irvin Oh1, Douglas Padgett3, Benjamin Ricciardi1, Kordo Saeed17, Parham Sendi18,19, Bryan Springer20, Paul Stoodley21, Joseph C Wenke22.
Abstract
Antibiotic-loaded bone cement (ALBC) is broadly used to treat orthopaedic infections based on the rationale that high-dose local delivery is essential to eradicate biofilm-associated bacteria. However, ALBC formulations are empirically based on drug susceptibility from routine laboratory testing, which is known to have limited clinical relevance for biofilms. There are also dosing concerns with nonstandardized, surgeon-directed, hand-mixed formulations, which have unknown release kinetics. On the basis of our knowledge of in vivo biofilms, pathogen virulence, safety issues with nonstandardized ALBC formulations, and questions about the cost-effectiveness of ALBC, there is a need to evaluate the evidence for this clinical practice. To this end, thought leaders in the field of musculoskeletal infection (MSKI) met on 1 August 2019 to review and debate published and anecdotal information, which highlighted four major concerns about current ALBC use: (a) substantial lack of level 1 evidence to demonstrate efficacy; (b) ALBC formulations become subtherapeutic following early release, which risks induction of antibiotic resistance, and exacerbated infection from microbial colonization of the carrier; (c) the absence of standardized formulation protocols, and Food and Drug Administration-approved high-dose ALBC products to use following resection in MSKI treatment; and (d) absence of a validated assay to determine the minimum biofilm eradication concentration to predict ALBC efficacy against patient specific micro-organisms. Here, we describe these concerns in detail, and propose areas in need of research.Entities:
Keywords: Biofilm Meeting; antibiotic-loaded bone cement (ALBC); local antibiotics; musculoskeletal infection (MSKI)
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31997412 PMCID: PMC7390691 DOI: 10.1002/jor.24616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Res ISSN: 0736-0266 Impact factor: 3.102