| Literature DB >> 35200426 |
Moritz Caspar Deml1, Emmanuelle N Cattaneo1, Sebastian Frederick Bigdon1, Hans-Jörg Sebald2, Sven Hoppe1, Paul Heini3, Lorin Michael Benneker1,3, Christoph Emanuel Albers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical treatment for erosive pyogenic spondylodiscitis of the lumbar spine is challenging as, following debridement of the intervertebral and bony abscess, a large and irregular defect is created. Sufficient defect reconstruction with conventional implants using a posterior approach is often impossible. Therefore, we developed the "Cement-PLIF", a single-stage posterior lumbar procedure, combining posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF) with defect-filling using antibiotic-loaded polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA). This study first describes and evaluates the procedure's efficacy, safety, and infection eradication rate. Radiological implant stability, bone-regeneration, sagittal profile reconstruction, procedure-related complications, and pre-existing comorbidities were further analyzed.Entities:
Keywords: PMMA; bony erosion; discitis; osteomyelitis; polymethylmethacrylate; spinal implants; spinal infection; spine; spondylodiscitis; staphylococcus aureus
Year: 2022 PMID: 35200426 PMCID: PMC8869766 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9020073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1The in-house treatment algorithm for lumbar spondylodiscitis is illustrated. This study focused on the third group, marked with inverted colors, italic characters, and grey boxes.
Figure 2Patient cohort selection diagram.
Basic demographic data. (*), (**), (***), (****) and (*****) paired Student’s t-test p < 0.0001; : Number Rating Scale for subjective evaluation of pain level (0–10); Segmental lordosis: Angle between the upper and lower endplate of the adjacent vertebra to the infected disc space and endplates. Lumbar lordosis: Angle between the upper endplate of vertebra Lumbar 1 and Sacral 1.
| Parameter | Values |
|---|---|
| Female ( | 28 (38.4%) |
| Average age (years) | 68.1 (SD: 12.3; range: 32–90) |
| Debrided and augmented disc levels ( | 88 |
| Stabilized segments ( | 121 |
| Hospital stay (days) | 15.1 (SD: 9.2; range: 6–45) |
| Previous lumbar spine operation ( | 14 (19.2%) |
| Mean operation time in minutes | 166 (SD: 50: range: 60–420) |
| Average ASA-Classification (median [min–max]) | 3 (SD: 0.7; range: 1–4) |
| Mean blood loss (L) | 0.71 (SD: 0.51; range: 0.2–2.5) |
| Mean CRP (mg/L, Normal < 5) at admission | 112 (SD: 83; range: 9–322; CI: 91–133) * |
| Mean CRP (mg/L, Normal < 5) at discharge | 41 (SD: 35; range: 2–144; CI: 33–50) * |
| Mean WBC (G/L, Normal range 3.0–10.5) at admission | 11.7 (SD: 4.7; range: 3.6–22.9; CI: 10.5–12.8) ** |
| Mean WBC (G/L, Normal range 3.0–10.5)at discharge | 8.3 (SD: 2.6; range: 3.5–19.1; CI: 7.6–9) ** |
| Mean NRS preoperatively | 5.6 (SD: 2.9; range: 0–10; CI: 5.9–6.3) *** |
| Mean NRS at hospital discharge | 4.8 (SD: 2.2; range: 2–10; CI: 4.3–5.4) |
| Mean NRS at last follow-up | 2.2 (SD: 2.2; range: 0–10; CI: 1.7–2.8) *** |
| Preoperative segmental lordosis | 5.6 (SD: 15.6; range: −29–43; CI: 1.7–9.5) **** |
| Postoperative segmental lordosis | 14.3 (SD: 14.4; range: −19–49; CI: 10.7–17.9) **** |
| Preoperative lumbar lordosis | 40.4 (SD: 15.5; range: −15–70; CI: 36.5–44.2) ***** |
| Postoperative lumbar lordosis | 48.8 (SD: 11.9; range: 12–72; CI: 45.8–51.8) ***** |
New developed grading to evaluate bone regeneration, posterior fusion, and implant stability based on Lee et al., Bridwell et al. and Gruen et al. [12,13,14]. The halo sign is detectable, especially in anterior–posterior X-rays as lysis around a pedicle screw, suggestive of implant loosening.
| Grade I | Grade II | Grade III | Grade IV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior Bone regeneration | + | + | - | - |
| Posterior Fusion mass | + | + | + | - |
| Lysis around the PMMA | none | <3 mm | ≥3 mm | ≥3 mm |
| Halo Ring Sign around pedicle screws (Lee et al.) | none | <1 mm | <1 mm | ≥1 mm |
Microbiology results.
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| Evidence of causative pathogen | 64/73 (87.7%) |
| Polymicrobial infections | 3/73 (4.1%) |
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| Staphylococcus aureus | 15 (22.4%) |
| Staphylococcus aureus (methicillin-resistant) | 1 (1.5%) |
| Coagulase-negative staphylococcus | 9 (13.4%) |
| Staphylococcus lugdunensis | 1 (1.5%) |
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| Beta-hemolytic streptococci | 5 (7.5%) |
| Peptostreptococci | 3 (4.5%) |
| Streptococcus viridans | 2 (3.0%) |
| Streptococcus bovis | 1 (1.5%) |
| Streptococcus pneumonia | 1 (1.5%) |
| Streptococcus sanguinis | 1 (1.5%) |
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| Enterococcus faecalis | 4 (6.0%) |
| Actinomyces | 1 (1.5%) |
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| Escherichia coli | 7 (10.4%) |
| Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 4 (6.0%) |
| Propionibacterium acnes | 3 (4.5%) |
| Morganella morganii | 2 (3.0%) |
| Yersinia | 1 (1.5%) |
| Enterobacter aeruginosa | 1 (1.5%) |
| Campylobacter fetus | 1 (1.5%) |
| Klebsiella | 1 (1.5%) |
| Arcanobacterium pyogenes | 1 (1.5%) |
| Alcaligenes species | 1 (1.5%) |
| Corynebacterium amycolatum | 1 (1.5%) |
Affected lumbar segments.
| Lumbar Level | |
|---|---|
| Th12/L1 | 6 (6.8%) |
| L1/2 | 7 (8.0%) |
| L2/3 | 21 (23.9%) |
| L3/4 | 18 (20.5%) |
| L4/5 | 25 (28.4%) |
| L5/S1 | 11 (12.5%) |
| Total | 88 |
| Ø/Patient | 1.2 |
Comorbidities classified according to the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI); (*) Student’s t-test: p = 0.001.
| Comorbidity (Weight CCI) |
|
|---|---|
| Myocardial Infarction (1) | 15 |
| Congestive Heart Failure (1) | 25 |
| Vascular disease (1) | 7 |
| Peripheral Cerebrovascular disease (1) | 9 |
| Dementia (1) | 6 |
| Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (1) | 5 |
| Connective Tissue disease (1) | 2 |
| Peptic Ulcer disease (1) | 4 |
| Diabetes Mellitus uncomplicated (1) | 18 |
| Diabetes Mellitus with end-organ damage (2) | 11 |
| Moderate to severe Chronic Kidney Disease (2) | 26 |
| Hemiplegia (2) | 4 |
| Leukemia (2) | 0 |
| Malignant Lymphoma (2) | 1 |
| Solid Tumor (2) | 11 |
| Solid Tumor with metastatic diseases (6) | 2 |
| Liver disease mild (1) | 11 |
| Liver disease moderate to severe (3) | 6 |
| AIDS (6) | 1 |
| Mean CCI (all) | 3.3 (SD 2.7; range: 0–13; CI: 2.7–4.0) |
| Mean CCI (died during follow–up; | 7.3 (SD: 2.6; range: 5–13; CI: 5.3–9.4) (*) |
| Mean CCI (survivors; | 2.8 (SD: 2.1; range: 0–11; CI: 2.3–3.3) (*) |
| Patients on hemodialysis | 7 (9.6%) |
| Multi-substance abuse | 27 (37%) |
Figure 3Thirty-eight-year-old male patient suffering from severe erosive spondylodiscitis with a ~40% bony defect in L3/4. Preoperative MRI and CT scans are shown in images (a,b). Immediately postoperatively (c) and one-year postoperatively (d) lateral and (e) a.p. X-rays show bony regeneration and clinical infection consolidation in the affected segment L3/4. L5 was included in the stabilization due to a weak bony situation during the operation to provide sufficient stability.
Figure 4Initial X-ray shows a retrolisthesis L2/3 with mild segmental degeneration in a sixty-two-year-old male patient (a). Follow-up MRI due to persistent pain six weeks later shows pyogenic spondylodiscitis in L2/3 with progressive bony destruction (b). Directly postoperative (c) and 12 months (d,e) postoperative a.p. and lateral radiographs with anterior PMMA leakage, bone regeneration, and stable implants.
Figure 5Female patient, 46-years old, pyogenic erosive spondylodiscitis L4/5 with staphylococcus aureus identified as the causative pathogen. Preoperative standing a.p. and lateral X-ray (a), MRI of the lumbar spine (b), and CT scan (c). Postoperative standing a.p. and lateral X-ray after Cement-PLIF L4/5 and postero-lateral fusion (d). Six-year follow-up with standing X-rays a.p. and lateral of the lumbar spine (e). Cranial adjacent segment disease (L3/4) is demonstrated by MRI (f). Adjacent segment fixation L3/4 after preoperative exclusion of reinfection by open biopsy with postoperative standing X-rays of the lumbar spine six years post-operatively (g). Sixteen-year follow-up CT scan of the lumbar spine with intact Cement-PLIF, anterior and posterior fusion, and infection elimination (h).
Figure 6Sixty-two-year-old male patient with severe destructive spondylodiscitis L4/5. Preoperative CT-Scheme and lateral X-ray (a,b). Three-month follow-up radiograph (c,d). X-ray and CT scan one year after surgery showing anterior, intervertebral pseudarthrosis with stable posterior implants (e–h).
Early and late local and non-local complications requiring revisions to the lumbar spine.
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| Hematoma (posterior) | 2 (2.7%) |
| Psoas abscess/hematoma | 2 (2.7%) |
| Second-look | 2 (2.7%) |
| Dural tear with fistula | 1 (1.4%) |
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| Local infection in continuity with an adjacent segment with the same pathogen six months later | 1 (1.4%) |
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| Spondylodiscitis of another level due to different microorganisms (13, 17, and 36 months postoperatively) | 3 (4.1%) |
| Adjacent fracture due to fall | 3 (4.1%) |
| Adjacent segment degeneration | 3 (4.1%) |
Figure 7Kaplan–Meier survival curves for all patients (a) and differentiated by comorbidities determined with a median split of the CCI: CCI ≤ 3; n = 36 (blue graph) and >3; n = 37 (red graph), log-rank test: p = 0.005 (b).