Division of Public Health, Infectious Diseases, and Occupational Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Thammasat University, Pathum Thani, Thailand.
Clin Infect Dis. 2024 Oct 15;79(4):1062-1070. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciae136.
Native joint septic arthritis (NJSA) is definitively diagnosed by a positive Gram stain or culture, along with supportive clinical findings. Preoperative antibiotics are known to alter synovial fluid cell count, Gram stain, and culture results and are typically postponed until after arthrocentesis to optimize diagnostic accuracy. However, data on the impact of preoperative antibiotics on operative culture yield for NJSA diagnosis are limited.
We retrospectively reviewed adult cases of NJSA who underwent surgery at Mayo Clinic facilities from 2012 to 2021 to analyze the effect of preoperative antibiotics on operative culture yield through a paired analysis of preoperative culture (POC) and operative culture (OC) results using logistic regression and generalized estimating equations.
Two hundred ninety-nine patients with NJSA affecting 321 joints were included. Among those receiving preoperative antibiotics, yield significantly decreased from 68.0% at POC to 57.1% at OC (P < .001). In contrast, for patients without preoperative antibiotics there was a non-significant increase in yield from 60.9% at POC to 67.4% at OC (P = .244). In a logistic regression model for paired data, preoperative antibiotic exposure was more likely to decrease OC yield compared to non-exposure (odds ratio [OR] = 2.12; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.24-3.64; P = .006). Within the preoperative antibiotic group, additional antibiotic doses and earlier antibiotic initiation were associated with lower OC yield.
In patients with NJSA, preoperative antibiotic exposure resulted in a significant decrease in microbiologic yield of operative cultures as compared to patients in whom antibiotic therapy was held prior to obtaining operative cultures.
Native joint septic arthritis(NJSA)的明确诊断依据是革兰氏染色或培养阳性,同时伴有支持性的临床发现。已知术前抗生素会改变关节滑液的细胞计数、革兰氏染色和培养结果,通常会推迟到关节穿刺抽吸术之后进行,以优化诊断准确性。然而,关于术前抗生素对 NJSA 诊断的手术培养阳性率影响的数据有限。
我们回顾性分析了 2012 年至 2021 年在梅奥诊所接受手术治疗的成人 NJSA 病例,通过对术前培养(POC)和手术培养(OC)结果进行配对分析,使用逻辑回归和广义估计方程来分析术前抗生素对手术培养阳性率的影响。
共纳入 299 例 NJSA 患者,涉及 321 个关节。在接受术前抗生素治疗的患者中,阳性率从 POC 的 68.0%显著下降至 OC 的 57.1%(P<0.001)。相比之下,对于未接受术前抗生素治疗的患者,阳性率从 POC 的 60.9%略有增加至 OC 的 67.4%(P=0.244)。在配对数据的逻辑回归模型中,与未暴露组相比,术前抗生素暴露更有可能降低 OC 阳性率(比值比[OR] = 2.12;95%置信区间[CI] = 1.24-3.64;P=0.006)。在术前抗生素组内,抗生素剂量的增加和抗生素的提前使用与 OC 阳性率降低相关。
与在获取手术培养物之前停止抗生素治疗的患者相比,术前抗生素暴露导致 NJSA 患者的手术培养物微生物学阳性率显著降低。