| Literature DB >> 35215290 |
Jonathan Schoeffel1, Elizabeth Wenqian Wang2, Dustin Gill3, Joseph Frackler4, Bri'Anna Horne4, Theodore Manson1, James B Doub5.
Abstract
Prosthetic joint infections are a serious complication of joint replacement surgery due to the significant morbidity and financial burden that is associated with conventional treatments. When patients fail the gold standard two-stage revision surgery, very limited, well-defined standardized approaches are available. Herein, we discuss the case of a sixty-four-year-old woman who had a recalcitrant MRSA prosthetic joint infection of her knee and hip that failed repeated conventional surgical and medical treatments. Only after receiving intraoperative and intravenous bacteriophage therapy was the patient able to achieve cure of her prosthetic joint infections, as demonstrated by the lack of clinical recurrence and sterility of intraoperative cultures while off antibiotics. This case reinforces that bacteriophage therapy holds promise in the treatment of prosthetic joint infections and more specifically in complicated cases who have failed conventional surgical and medical interventions.Entities:
Keywords: MRSA; bacteriophage therapy; biofilm; periprosthetic joint infections
Year: 2022 PMID: 35215290 PMCID: PMC8877365 DOI: 10.3390/ph15020177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1X-ray of knee and hip before and after bacteriophage therapy. (A,B) X-ray anterior-posterior view of right knee and hip showing temporary antibiotic-coated knee prosthetic and Prostalac hip spacer with residual cerclage wire and screw. (C,D) X-ray lateral view knee and anterior-posterior view hip showing total knee and hip arthroplasties implanted after bacteriophage therapy and subsequent proven sterility of the joints. Retained cerclage wire still present.
Figure 2Timeline of the patient’s recalcitrant MRSA PJI of knee and hip. Red steps indicate continued infection, while green steps indicate resolution of infection as seen with no clinical symptoms and sterile deep tissue bacteriological cultures. The figure shows it was not until bacteriophage therapy was used that cure of infection occurred. IA refers to intraarticular administration. DAIR refers to debridement and implant retention surgery. MSIS refers to musculoskeletal infection society. The MSIS criteria for PJI diagnosis are well documented elsewhere [2].
Sterility, titers and endotoxin levels of bacteriophage used in this case.
| Phage ID | Titer | Endotoxin (EU/Dose) | Sterility Testing |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1.2 × 109 | <1 | No Growth |