| Literature DB >> 32670774 |
Eric Senneville1,2, Donatienne Joulie2,3, Nicolas Blondiaux2,4, Olivier Robineau1,2.
Abstract
Surgery is an important part of the management of patients diagnosed with DFO. It consists in some selected patients, to remove all or part of the infected bone(s) or even to amputate all or part of the foot. Despite the use of sophisticated imaging techniques, it is however difficult to remove all the infected tissue while respecting the principles of an economical surgery. Bone biopsy performed at the margins of the resection permits to identify residual osteomyelitis and to adjust the post-surgical antibiotic treatment. Some recent studies have reported the way to perform bone margin biopsies and have assessed the impact of the bone results on the patient's outcome. However, the real impact of a residual osteomyelitis on the risk of recurrent DFO is still debated and questions regarding the interpretation of the results remain to be solved. Similarly, the consequences in terms of choice and duration of the antimicrobial treatment to use in case of positive bone margin are not clearly established. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic therapy, surgery; bone margins biopsy; diabetic foot osteomyelitis; outcome
Year: 2020 PMID: 32670774 PMCID: PMC7358966 DOI: 10.7150/jbji.45338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Jt Infect ISSN: 2206-3552
Recommendation/current state of knowledge regarding surgical bone biopsy in patients with diabetic foot osteomyelitis (DFO)
| Questions | Recommendations/current state of knowledge |
|---|---|
| Should bone biopsy be performed in every patient with a (suspected) DFO? | It is useful to obtain a bone specimen in almost all cases of (suspected) DFO |
| Should culture and histology be systematically performed on bone samples? | The diagnosis of DFO is established when one or more bone specimens has |
| Should bone biopsy be performed on each stump in case of a conservative surgery (i.e., joint resection)? | Since the infectious process is likely to have spread towards both distal and proximal direction from the resected bone, performing a biopsy on both stumps seems appropriate. |
| In case of exarticulation, should the cartilage be removed? | The avascular cartilage material is less able to defend itself against the pathogens (especially |
| What is the optimal duration of the antibiotic therapy in case of positive bone margin culture in case of conservative surgery or amputation? | 3-week duration seems enough in these situations |
| Are rifampicin combinations recommended in patients with a bone margin biopsy positive in culture for | In case of conservative surgery or amputation, the presence of biofilm in residual bone tissues is unlikely and therefore is not in favour of the use of rifampicin combinations |
| What are the histology criteria for the presence of acute or chronic osteomyelitis? | Acute osteomyelitis is defined by necrosis, destroyed bone and infiltration of polymorphonuclear granulocytes usually associated with congestion or thrombosis of medullary or periosteal small vessels. |