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Brief Report

Clinical features of anaerobic orthopaedic infections

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 137-140 | Received 21 Mar 2016, Accepted 15 Aug 2016, Published online: 31 Aug 2016
 

Abstract

Some patient populations and types of orthopaedic surgery could be at particular risk for anaerobic infections. In this retrospective cohort study of operated adult patients with infections from 2004 to 2014, we assessed obligate anaerobes and considered first clinical infection episodes. Anaerobes, isolated from intra-operative samples, were identified in 2.4% of 2740 surgical procedures, of which half (33/65; 51%) were anaerobic monomicrobial infections. Propionibacterium acnes, a penicillin and vancomycin susceptible pathogen, was the predominantly isolated anaerobe. By multivariate analysis, the presence of fracture fixation plates was the variable most strongly associated with anaerobic infection (odds ratio: 2.1, 95% CI: 1.3–3.5). Anaerobes were also associated with spondylodesis and polymicrobial infections. In contrast, it revealed less likely in native bone or prosthetic joint infections and was not related to prior antibiotic use. In conclusion, obligate anaerobes in our case series of orthopaedic infections were rare, and mostly encountered in infections related to trauma with open-fracture fixation devices rather than clean surgical site infection. Anaerobes were often co-pathogens, and cultures most frequently recovered P. acnes. These observations thus do not support changes in current practices such as broader anaerobe coverage for perioperative prophylaxis.

Acknowledgements

We thank the teams of the Laboratory of Bacteriology and the Orthopaedic Service for their support.

Disclosure statement

All listed authors declare no financial support, grants, financial interests or consultancy that could lead to conflicts of interest. Parts of the manuscript have been presented at the 3rd International Conference of Prevention and Infection Control (ICPIC), 16–19 June 2015, Geneva, Switzerland.

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