髋关节和膝关节全关节置换术后感染:包括INFORM随机对照试验在内的研究项目

Q4 Medicine
A. Blom, A. Beswick, A. Burston, F. Carroll, K. Garfield, R. Gooberman-Hill, Shaun Harris, S. Kunutsor, A. Lane, E. Lenguerrand, A. MacGowan, C. Mallon, Andrew J. Moore, S. Noble, Cecily K Palmer, O. Rolfson, S. Strange, M. Whitehouse
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About 1 in 100 replacements becomes infected, and most people with infected replacements require further surgery.\n \n \n \n To investigate why some patients are predisposed to joint infections and how this affects patients and the NHS, and to evaluate treatments.\n \n \n \n Systematic reviews, joint registry analyses, qualitative interviews, a randomised controlled trial, health economic analyses and a discrete choice questionnaire.\n \n \n \n Our studies are relevant to the NHS, to the Swedish health system and internationally.\n \n \n \n People with prosthetic joint infection after hip or knee replacement and surgeons.\n \n \n \n Revision of hip prosthetic joint infection with a single- or two-stage procedure.\n \n \n \n Long-term patient-reported outcomes and reinfection. Cost-effectiveness of revision strategies over 18 months from two perspectives: health-care provider and Personal Social Services, and societal.\n \n \n \n National Joint Registry; literature databases; published cohort studies; interviews with 67 patients and 35 surgeons; a patient discrete choice questionnaire; and the INFORM (INFection ORthopaedic Management) randomised trial.\n \n \n \n Systematic reviews of studies reporting risk factors, diagnosis, treatment outcomes and cost comparisons. Individual patient data meta-analysis.\n \n \n \n In registry analyses, about 0.62% and 0.75% of patients with hip and knee replacement, respectively, had joint infection requiring surgery. Rates were four times greater after aseptic revision. The costs of inpatient and day-case admissions in people with hip prosthetic joint infection were about five times higher than those in people with no infection, an additional cost of > £30,000. People described devastating effects of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection and treatment. In the treatment of hip prosthetic joint infection, a two-stage procedure with or without a cement spacer had a greater negative impact on patient well-being than a single- or two-stage procedure with a custom-made articulating spacer. Surgeons described the significant emotional impact of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection and the importance of a supportive multidisciplinary team. In systematic reviews and registry analyses, the risk factors for hip and knee prosthetic joint infection included male sex, diagnoses other than osteoarthritis, high body mass index, poor physical status, diabetes, dementia and liver disease. Evidence linking health-care setting and surgeon experience with prosthetic joint infection was inconsistent. Uncemented fixation, posterior approach and ceramic bearings were associated with lower infection risk after hip replacement. In our systematic review, synovial fluid alpha-defensin and leucocyte esterase showed high diagnostic accuracy for prosthetic joint infection. Systematic reviews and individual patient data meta-analysis showed similar reinfection outcomes in patients with hip or knee prosthetic joint infection treated with single- and two-stage revision. In registry analysis, there was a higher rate of early rerevision after single-stage revision for hip prosthetic joint infection, but, overall, 40% fewer operations are required as part of a single-stage procedure than as part of a two-stage procedure. The treatment of hip or knee prosthetic joint infection with early debridement and implant retention may be effective in > 60% of cases. In the INFORM randomised controlled trial, 140 patients with hip prosthetic joint infection were randomised to single- or two-stage revision. Eighteen months after randomisation, pain, function and stiffness were similar between the randomised groups (p = 0.98), and there were no differences in reinfection rates. Patient outcomes improved earlier in the single-stage than in the two-stage group. Participants randomised to a single-stage procedure had lower costs (mean difference –£10,055, 95% confidence interval –£19,568 to –£542) and higher quality-adjusted life-years (mean difference 0.06, 95% confidence interval –0.07 to 0.18) than those randomised to a two-stage procedure. Single-stage was the more cost-effective option, with an incremental net monetary benefit at a threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year of £11,167 (95% confidence interval £638 to £21,696). 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Gooberman-Hill, Shaun Harris, S. Kunutsor, A. Lane, E. Lenguerrand, A. MacGowan, C. Mallon, Andrew J. Moore, S. Noble, Cecily K Palmer, O. Rolfson, S. Strange, M. Whitehouse\",\"doi\":\"10.3310/hdwl9760\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n \\n People with severe osteoarthritis, other joint conditions or injury may have joint replacement to reduce pain and disability. In the UK in 2019, over 200,000 hip and knee replacements were performed. 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People described devastating effects of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection and treatment. In the treatment of hip prosthetic joint infection, a two-stage procedure with or without a cement spacer had a greater negative impact on patient well-being than a single- or two-stage procedure with a custom-made articulating spacer. Surgeons described the significant emotional impact of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection and the importance of a supportive multidisciplinary team. In systematic reviews and registry analyses, the risk factors for hip and knee prosthetic joint infection included male sex, diagnoses other than osteoarthritis, high body mass index, poor physical status, diabetes, dementia and liver disease. Evidence linking health-care setting and surgeon experience with prosthetic joint infection was inconsistent. Uncemented fixation, posterior approach and ceramic bearings were associated with lower infection risk after hip replacement. In our systematic review, synovial fluid alpha-defensin and leucocyte esterase showed high diagnostic accuracy for prosthetic joint infection. Systematic reviews and individual patient data meta-analysis showed similar reinfection outcomes in patients with hip or knee prosthetic joint infection treated with single- and two-stage revision. In registry analysis, there was a higher rate of early rerevision after single-stage revision for hip prosthetic joint infection, but, overall, 40% fewer operations are required as part of a single-stage procedure than as part of a two-stage procedure. The treatment of hip or knee prosthetic joint infection with early debridement and implant retention may be effective in > 60% of cases. In the INFORM randomised controlled trial, 140 patients with hip prosthetic joint infection were randomised to single- or two-stage revision. Eighteen months after randomisation, pain, function and stiffness were similar between the randomised groups (p = 0.98), and there were no differences in reinfection rates. Patient outcomes improved earlier in the single-stage than in the two-stage group. Participants randomised to a single-stage procedure had lower costs (mean difference –£10,055, 95% confidence interval –£19,568 to –£542) and higher quality-adjusted life-years (mean difference 0.06, 95% confidence interval –0.07 to 0.18) than those randomised to a two-stage procedure. Single-stage was the more cost-effective option, with an incremental net monetary benefit at a threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year of £11,167 (95% confidence interval £638 to £21,696). In a discrete choice questionnaire completed by 57 patients 18 months after surgery to treat hip prosthetic joint infection, the most valued characteristics in decisions about revision were the ability to engage in valued activities and a quick return to normal activity.\\n \\n \\n \\n Some research was specific to people with hip prosthetic joint infection. Study populations in meta-analyses and registry analyses may have been selected for joint replacement and specific treatments. The INFORM trial was not powered to study reinfection and was limited to 18 months’ follow-up. The qualitative study subgroups were small.\\n \\n \\n \\n We identified risk factors, diagnostic biomarkers, effective treatments and patient preferences for the treatment of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection. The risk factors include male sex, diagnoses other than osteoarthritis, specific comorbidities and surgical factors. 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引用次数: 4

摘要

患有严重骨关节炎、其他关节疾病或受伤的人可能需要进行关节置换,以减轻疼痛和残疾。2019年,英国进行了超过20万例髋关节和膝关节置换术。大约每100个替换物中就有1个被感染,大多数被感染的替换物需要进一步的手术。调查为什么有些患者易患关节感染,以及这如何影响患者和NHS,并评估治疗方法。系统评价、联合登记分析、定性访谈、随机对照试验、卫生经济分析和离散选择问卷。我们的研究与NHS、瑞典卫生系统和国际相关。髋关节或膝关节置换术和外科手术后假体关节感染的人。髋关节假体关节感染的单期或双期修复。长期患者报告的结果和再感染。18个月内修订战略的成本效益从两个角度看:保健提供者和个人社会服务,以及社会。国家联合登记处;文献数据库;已发表的队列研究;访谈67例患者和35名外科医生;患者离散选择问卷;以及INFORM(感染骨科管理)随机试验。对报告危险因素、诊断、治疗结果和费用比较的研究进行系统审查。个体患者数据荟萃分析。在登记分析中,分别约0.62%和0.75%的髋关节和膝关节置换术患者有需要手术的关节感染。无菌改良后的发生率增加了四倍。髋关节假体感染患者的住院和日间住院费用约为未感染患者的5倍,额外费用为30万英镑。人们描述了髋关节和膝关节假体感染和治疗的破坏性影响。在髋关节假体感染的治疗中,有或没有水泥垫片的两阶段手术对患者健康的负面影响比有定制关节垫片的单阶段或两阶段手术更大。外科医生描述了髋关节和膝关节假体感染对患者情绪的影响,以及多学科团队支持的重要性。在系统回顾和登记分析中,髋关节和膝关节假体感染的危险因素包括男性、骨关节炎以外的诊断、高体重指数、身体状况差、糖尿病、痴呆和肝病。将卫生保健环境和外科医生经验与假体关节感染联系起来的证据并不一致。非骨水泥固定、后路入路和陶瓷轴承与髋关节置换术后感染风险较低相关。在我们的系统综述中,滑液α -防御素和白细胞酯酶对假体关节感染的诊断准确性很高。系统评价和个体患者数据荟萃分析显示,接受单期和两期翻修治疗的髋关节或膝关节假体感染患者的再感染结果相似。在登记分析中,髋关节假体感染单期翻修后的早期翻修率较高,但总体而言,单期翻修比两期翻修所需的手术减少了40%。早期清创和保留假体治疗髋关节或膝关节感染的成功率可达60%。在INFORM随机对照试验中,140例髋关节假体感染患者被随机分为单期或两期翻修。随机分组18个月后,两组疼痛、功能和僵硬相似(p = 0.98),再感染率无差异。单期治疗组的患者预后比两期治疗组改善得更早。随机分配到单阶段程序的参与者比随机分配到两阶段程序的参与者成本更低(平均差值为10,055英镑,95%置信区间为19,568英镑至- 542英镑),质量调整寿命年更高(平均差值为0.06,95%置信区间为- 0.07至0.18)。单阶段是更具成本效益的选择,每个质量调整生命年的增量净货币效益阈值为20,000英镑,为11,167英镑(95%置信区间为638英镑至21,696英镑)。在一份由57名髋关节假体感染术后18个月患者完成的离散选择问卷中,决定翻修时最重要的特征是参与有价值活动的能力和快速恢复正常活动的能力。一些研究是专门针对髋关节假体关节感染患者的。荟萃分析和登记分析中的研究人群可能已经选择进行关节置换和特定治疗。 INFORM试验未用于研究再感染,随访期为18个月。定性研究的亚组很小。我们确定了风险因素、诊断生物标志物、有效治疗方法和患者对髋关节和膝关节假体感染治疗的偏好。危险因素包括男性、非骨关节炎的诊断、特定合并症和手术因素。滑液α -防御素和白细胞酯酶具有较高的诊断准确性。感染对患者和外科医生来说是毁灭性的,他们都表示在治疗期间需要支持。清创和种植体保留是有效的,特别是如果早期进行。对于感染的髋关节置换术,单阶段和两阶段的翻修似乎同样有效,但单阶段的早期效果更好,在18个月的随访中具有成本效益,并且越来越多地被使用。患者更倾向于在3-9个月内完全恢复功能的治疗。为感染者提供信息、咨询、同伴支持和护理途径。为病人和保健专业人员提供支持性护理和信息,以便及早发现感染。比较髋关节和膝关节假体感染的替代和新的治疗策略。评估诊断方法并建立NHS诊断标准。INFORM随机对照试验注册号为ISRCTN10956306。所有系统评价均在PROSPERO中注册(编号为CRD42017069526、CRD42015023485、CRD42018106503、CRD42018114592、CRD42015023704、CRD42017057513、CRD42015016559、CRD42015017327和CRD42015016664)。该项目由国家卫生和保健研究所(NIHR)应用研究方案资助,并将全文发表在应用研究方案资助上;第十卷,第10期。请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站了解更多项目信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Infection after total joint replacement of the hip and knee: research programme including the INFORM RCT
People with severe osteoarthritis, other joint conditions or injury may have joint replacement to reduce pain and disability. In the UK in 2019, over 200,000 hip and knee replacements were performed. About 1 in 100 replacements becomes infected, and most people with infected replacements require further surgery. To investigate why some patients are predisposed to joint infections and how this affects patients and the NHS, and to evaluate treatments. Systematic reviews, joint registry analyses, qualitative interviews, a randomised controlled trial, health economic analyses and a discrete choice questionnaire. Our studies are relevant to the NHS, to the Swedish health system and internationally. People with prosthetic joint infection after hip or knee replacement and surgeons. Revision of hip prosthetic joint infection with a single- or two-stage procedure. Long-term patient-reported outcomes and reinfection. Cost-effectiveness of revision strategies over 18 months from two perspectives: health-care provider and Personal Social Services, and societal. National Joint Registry; literature databases; published cohort studies; interviews with 67 patients and 35 surgeons; a patient discrete choice questionnaire; and the INFORM (INFection ORthopaedic Management) randomised trial. Systematic reviews of studies reporting risk factors, diagnosis, treatment outcomes and cost comparisons. Individual patient data meta-analysis. In registry analyses, about 0.62% and 0.75% of patients with hip and knee replacement, respectively, had joint infection requiring surgery. Rates were four times greater after aseptic revision. The costs of inpatient and day-case admissions in people with hip prosthetic joint infection were about five times higher than those in people with no infection, an additional cost of > £30,000. People described devastating effects of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection and treatment. In the treatment of hip prosthetic joint infection, a two-stage procedure with or without a cement spacer had a greater negative impact on patient well-being than a single- or two-stage procedure with a custom-made articulating spacer. Surgeons described the significant emotional impact of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection and the importance of a supportive multidisciplinary team. In systematic reviews and registry analyses, the risk factors for hip and knee prosthetic joint infection included male sex, diagnoses other than osteoarthritis, high body mass index, poor physical status, diabetes, dementia and liver disease. Evidence linking health-care setting and surgeon experience with prosthetic joint infection was inconsistent. Uncemented fixation, posterior approach and ceramic bearings were associated with lower infection risk after hip replacement. In our systematic review, synovial fluid alpha-defensin and leucocyte esterase showed high diagnostic accuracy for prosthetic joint infection. Systematic reviews and individual patient data meta-analysis showed similar reinfection outcomes in patients with hip or knee prosthetic joint infection treated with single- and two-stage revision. In registry analysis, there was a higher rate of early rerevision after single-stage revision for hip prosthetic joint infection, but, overall, 40% fewer operations are required as part of a single-stage procedure than as part of a two-stage procedure. The treatment of hip or knee prosthetic joint infection with early debridement and implant retention may be effective in > 60% of cases. In the INFORM randomised controlled trial, 140 patients with hip prosthetic joint infection were randomised to single- or two-stage revision. Eighteen months after randomisation, pain, function and stiffness were similar between the randomised groups (p = 0.98), and there were no differences in reinfection rates. Patient outcomes improved earlier in the single-stage than in the two-stage group. Participants randomised to a single-stage procedure had lower costs (mean difference –£10,055, 95% confidence interval –£19,568 to –£542) and higher quality-adjusted life-years (mean difference 0.06, 95% confidence interval –0.07 to 0.18) than those randomised to a two-stage procedure. Single-stage was the more cost-effective option, with an incremental net monetary benefit at a threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year of £11,167 (95% confidence interval £638 to £21,696). In a discrete choice questionnaire completed by 57 patients 18 months after surgery to treat hip prosthetic joint infection, the most valued characteristics in decisions about revision were the ability to engage in valued activities and a quick return to normal activity. Some research was specific to people with hip prosthetic joint infection. Study populations in meta-analyses and registry analyses may have been selected for joint replacement and specific treatments. The INFORM trial was not powered to study reinfection and was limited to 18 months’ follow-up. The qualitative study subgroups were small. We identified risk factors, diagnostic biomarkers, effective treatments and patient preferences for the treatment of hip and knee prosthetic joint infection. The risk factors include male sex, diagnoses other than osteoarthritis, specific comorbidities and surgical factors. Synovial fluid alpha-defensin and leucocyte esterase showed high diagnostic accuracy. Infection is devastating for patients and surgeons, both of whom describe the need for support during treatment. Debridement and implant retention is effective, particularly if performed early. For infected hip replacements, single- and two-stage revision appear equally efficacious, but single-stage has better early results, is cost-effective at 18-month follow-up and is increasingly used. Patients prefer treatments that allow full functional return within 3–9 months. For people with infection, develop information, counselling, peer support and care pathways. Develop supportive care and information for patients and health-care professionals to enable the early recognition of infections. Compare alternative and new treatment strategies in hip and knee prosthetic joint infection. Assess diagnostic methods and establish NHS diagnostic criteria. The INFORM randomised controlled trial is registered as ISRCTN10956306. All systematic reviews were registered in PROSPERO (as CRD42017069526, CRD42015023485, CRD42018106503, CRD42018114592, CRD42015023704, CRD42017057513, CRD42015016559, CRD42015017327 and CRD42015016664). This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 10, No. 10. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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