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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2008, p. 824-825, Vol. 46, No. 2
0095-1137/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01227-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
| LETTER TO THE EDITOR |

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From August 2003 to August 2004, 69 orthopedic implants (38 hip prostheses, 21 shoulder prostheses, 9 knee prostheses, and 1 ankle prosthesis) were removed at revision operations for aseptic failure or presumed infection. According to an in-house standardized clinical score and on the basis of clinical and laboratory information, a prosthetic joint infection was rated as definitive, probable, possible, or rejected as diagnosis. Intraoperative tissue specimens were sampled (an average of four tissue samples per implant removed) in theater and cultured using standard techniques. Removed implants were placed aseptically in sterile polyethylene bags to which Ringer solution (100 ml) was added, and the bags were heat sealed. The entire bag was then placed in a sonication bath (USC 900 TH; VWR International, Dietikon, Switzerland) and sonicated at 45 kHz at 200 W for 10 min. Sonicates were inoculated on aerobic and anaerobic agar plates (0.5 ml) and in enrichment cultures (5.0 ml). In addition, sonicates were subjected to broad-range eubacterial PCR by centrifuging 50 ml of the sonicate at 4,000 x g for 30 min; after removal of the supernatant, the pellet was used for DNA extraction, purification, amplification, gel electrophoresis, and sequence analysis as described previously (1). For tissue samples, bacterial growth in at least one sample following direct plating or enrichment growth in more than one sample was considered positive, and enrichment growth in a single tissue was considered negative; direct bacterial growth of the sonicate on at least one of the inoculated plates was considered positive, and enrichment growth only was considered negative. Typical water contaminants, e.g., Acidovorax spp., Dechloromonas spp., and Ralstonia spp., cultured or detected by PCR from sonicates were not taken into account.
According to the clinical score, a prosthetic joint infection was present in 14 of the 69 patients. Eleven of 14 had positive cultures for tissue samples; 13/14 were found to have positive cultures when the results from sonicate cultures were considered in addition. Sonicate PCR was positive in 12/13 and negative in 1/13 (excluding 1 infection due to Candida albicans) (Table 1). Ultrasonication improved the sensitivity of cultures from 78.6% to 92.9%. Processing ultrasonicated implants by PCR resulted in a sensitivity of 92.3% compared to 71.4% by culture. The sensitivity of PCR of sonicates was similar to that of the combined cultures of periprosthetic tissues and sonicates (92.3% versus 92.9%). According to the clinical score, infection was considered possible, but unlikely, in 27 patients and rejected as diagnosis in 28 patients; altogether, in 55 patients infection was not suspected from a clinical point of view. For these patients, conventional cultures of intraoperative tissue samples and sonicate cultures were false positive in 1/55 and 2/55 cases, respectively (Table 1). The specificity of PCR of sonicates was found to be 100% when typical waterborne bacteria found by PCR in four sonicates and four sonicates with mixed sequences were not taken into consideration.
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TABLE 1. Clinical infection scores versus results for microbiological investigations
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Based on our preliminary results, we currently use the following diagnostic procedure: (i) according to the clinical score, patients are categorized into definitive, probable, possible, and rejected infection groups; (ii) tissue samples and implants are obtained for laboratory investigations; (iii) in the case of a definitive or probable infection, tissue samples and the sonicated implant are subjected to cultural investigations; and (iv) in the case of a possible or rejected infection, tissue samples are subjected to cultural investigations, and the sonicate is used for PCR in the case of a positive culture to increase specificity. While the manuscript was in the review process, Trampuz et al. reported that culture of samples obtained by sonication of prostheses was significantly more sensitive than conventional periprosthetic tissue culture (4). What could explain this difference? Trampuz et al. did not distinguish between bacterial growth upon direct plating and enrichment growth. Specificity was thus achieved at the expense of sensitivity by considering positive only cases with at least two positive tissue culture results. We realize that the main limitation of our study is the lack of histopathology, as this is not part of the diagnostic workup in place. Despite this, our study indicates that PCR adds little, if any, gain in sensitivity. Larger studies in combination with a clinical score are required to establish the optimal and most cost-efficient diagnostic procedure.
Published ahead of print on 26 November 2007.
Present address: Bio-Analytica AG, 6000 Luzern 6, Switzerland. ![]()
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C. Dora
Orthopädische Universitätsklinik Balgrist 8008 Zürich, Switzerland
M. Altwegg
C. Gerber
E. C. Böttger
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| * Phone: 41 44 634 27 00, Fax: 41 44 634 49 06, E-mail: rzbinden{at}immv.uzh.ch |
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