Richard Feng, Kacie Mitchell, Shyam S Ramachandran, Melle Broekman, Anthony Johnson, David Ring, Sina Ramtin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: There is no consensus reference standard for diagnosing prosthetic shoulder joint infection (PJI). There may be inadequate distinction between colonization and infection. It is not clear that culture of a common shoulder commensal organism can account for unexpected pain or stiffness after shoulder arthroplasty. In this survey-based experiment, we asked: 1) What patient and surgeon variables are associated with diagnosis of shoulder PJI? And 2) What is the surgeon interobserver agreement for diagnosis of shoulder PJI?
Methods: One hundred seven members of the Science of Variation Group reviewed ten hypothetical patient scenarios with five randomized variables: examination findings, serum markers, synovial fluid markers, histological assessment, and organism cultured from deep tissue specimens. Participants diagnosed the presence or absence of shoulder PJI. Mixed multilevel logistic regression sought variables associated with PJI diagnosis. Interobserver agreement was measured with Fleiss kappa.
Results: Surgeon diagnosis of shoulder PJI was independently associated with deep tissue culture growth of C. acnes (OR=235 [95% CI 19 to 2933]; P < 0.01), S. epidermidis (OR=147 [95% CI 8.4 to 2564]; P < 0.01), and S. aureus (OR=110 [95% CI 6.9 to 1755]; P < 0.01) much more so than presence of a sinus tract on examination (OR=43 [95% CI 3.7 to 505]; P < 0.01), inflammatory histology (OR=15 [95% CI 4.0 to 58]; P < 0.01), inflammatory synovial fluid markers (OR=13 [95% CI 3.9 to 45]; P < 0.01), and serum inflammatory markers (OR=5.8 [95% CI 2.0 to 17]; P < 0.01). The reliability of surgeon diagnosis for shoulder PJI was poor (Fleiss kappa = 0.013 [95% CI -0.0039 to 0.031]).
Conclusion: The observation that surgeons may not adequately distinguish colonization and infection - considering any positive culture as an infection - combined with the low reliability of diagnosis observed, suggests possible overdiagnosis and overtreatment of shoulder PJI.
期刊介绍:
The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery (ABJS) aims to encourage a better understanding of all aspects of Orthopedic Sciences. The journal accepts scientific papers including original research, review article, short communication, case report, and letter to the editor in all fields of bone, joint, musculoskeletal surgery and related researches. The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery (ABJS) will publish papers in all aspects of today`s modern orthopedic sciences including: Arthroscopy, Arthroplasty, Sport Medicine, Reconstruction, Hand and Upper Extremity, Pediatric Orthopedics, Spine, Trauma, Foot and Ankle, Tumor, Joint Rheumatic Disease, Skeletal Imaging, Orthopedic Physical Therapy, Rehabilitation, Orthopedic Basic Sciences (Biomechanics, Biotechnology, Biomaterial..).