Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare the incidence of reinfection in patients who received oral antibiotic prophylaxis with those who did not following two-stage revision knee arthroplasty. Additional purposes included: (1) comparison of these findings to the infection rate in patients who underwent revision for aseptic reasons, and (2) characterisation of the organisms responsible for reinfection following revision procedures. Twenty-eight two-stage revision knee arthroplasty procedures were followed up by a mean of 33days of oral antibiotics (range, 28-43days), while the remaining 38 procedures received only 24-72 hours of in-patient antibiotics. The incidence of reinfection in each group within 12months was compared. The reinfection rates were additionally compared to those of 237 patients who underwent revision for aseptic loosening over the same time period. Patients who were treated with postoperative antibiotic prophylaxis had a considerably lower reinfection rate, with one reinfection in the prophylaxis group (4%), compared to six reinfections in the no-prophylaxis group (16%). The reinfection rates remained higher compared to those found in patients who underwent revision knee arthroplasty for aseptic loosening (1 of 237 patients; 0.4%). Both high and low virulence organisms were identified in the patients who were subsequently reinfected. A minimum of 28days of postoperative oral antibiotics appeared to decrease reinfection rates following two-stage revision knee arthroplasty. These results suggest that the use of oral antibiotic prophylaxis following re-implantation may be appropriate in all patients undergoing two-stage revision, even in the absence of any signs of active infection.

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