The Journal of Arthroplasty, ISSN: 0883-5403, Vol: 26, Issue: 6, Page: 114-118

Irrigation and Debridement for Periprosthetic Infections Does the Organism Matter?

Susan M. Odum; Thomas K. Fehring; Adolph V. Lombardi; Ben M. Zmistowski; Nicholas M. Brown; Jeffrey T. Luna; Keith A. Fehring; Erik N. Hansen; Keith R. Berend; Kevin J. Bozic; Craig J.Della Valle; Terence J. Gioe; William A. Jiranek; Javad Parvizi; Bryan D. Springer
Ankle Elbow Hip Knee Shoulder Wrist

Irrigation and debridement (I&D) is an attractive treatment alternative for periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). Irrigation and debridement failure rates average 64% (range, 10.5%-84%) and may be associated with causative organism type and virulence. The study objective was to compare revision rates for PJI caused by streptococcal organisms to other organisms treated with I&D. A multicenter retrospective cohort study of 200 consecutive PJIs treated with I&D was performed. Failure was defined as reoperation for PJI. Failure rate for streptococcal infections was 65% (20/31) compared with 71% (84/119) for other organisms. Failure rate for sensitive Staphylococcus was 72% (48/67) compared with a 76% (22/29) failure rate for resistant Staphylococcus. These results indicate that eradication rates of I&D for a streptococcal PJI are comparable with other causative organisms. Irrigation and debridement should play a limited role in the PJI treatment algorithm regardless of organism type.


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