Antibiotic calcium sulphate beads lower the bacterial burden and prevent infection in a mouse model of periprosthetic joint infection

  • Hart, C. M.
  • Kelley, B. V.
  • Mamouei, Z.
  • Turkmani, A.
  • Ralston, M.
  • Arnold, M.
  • Bernthal, N. M.
  • Sassoon, A. A.
The Bone & Joint Journal 106B(6):p 632-638, June 2024.

Aims

Delayed postoperative inoculation of orthopaedic implants with persistent wound drainage or bacterial seeding of a haematoma can result in periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). The aim of this in vivo study was to compare the efficacy of vancomycin powder with vancomycin-eluting calcium sulphate beads in preventing PJI due to delayed inoculation.

Methods

A mouse model of PJI of the knee was used. Mice were randomized into groups with intervention at the time of surgery (postoperative day (POD) 0): a sterile control (SC; n = 6); infected control (IC; n = 15); systemic vancomycin (SV; n = 9); vancomycin powder (VP; n = 21); and vancomycin bead (VB; n = 19) groups. Delayed inoculation was introduced during an arthrotomy on POD 7 with 1 × 10colony-forming units (CFUs) of a bioluminescent strain ofStaphylococcus aureus. The bacterial burden was monitored using bioluminescence in vivo. All mice were killed on POD 21. Implants and soft-tissue were harvested and sonicated for analysis of the CFUs.

Results

The mean in vivo bioluminescence in the VB group was significantly lower on POD 8 and POD 10 compared with the other groups. There was a significant 1.3-log10 (95%) and 1.5-log10 (97%) reduction in mean soft-tissue CFUs in the VB group compared with the VP and IC groups (3.6 × 10vs 7.0 × 10; p = 0.022; 3.6 × 10vs 1.0 × 10; p = 0.007, respectively) at POD 21. There was a significant 1.6-log10 (98%) reduction in mean implant CFUs in the VB group compared with the IC group (1.3 × 100 vs 4.7 × 10, respectively; p = 0.038). Combined soft-tissue and implant infection was prevented in 10 of 19 mice (53%) in the VB group as opposed to 5 of 21 (24%) in the VP group, 3 of 15 (20%) in the IC group, and 0% in the SV group.

Conclusion

In our in vivo mouse model, antibiotic-releasing calcium sulphate beads appeared to outperform vancomycin powder alone in lowering the bacterial burden and preventing soft-tissue and implant infections.

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