Prevention of Periprosthetic Joint Infection in Total Hip and Knee Replacement: One European Consensus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- Preventing and mitigating PJI according to risk factors
- Importance of skin preparation in preventing PJI
- The role of various options available to improve the pre-operative prevention of PJI
- What intra-operative actions could be implemented to improve the prevention of PJI
- What post-operative actions could be implemented to improve the prevention of PJI
- The role and suitability of the current guidelines
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Respondent Demographics
3.2. Preventing and Mitigating PJI According to Risk Factors
3.3. Importance of Skin Preparation in Preventing PJI
3.4. The Role of Various Options Available to Improve the Pre-Operative Prevention of PJI (22–26)
3.5. What Other Intra-Operative Action Could Be Implemented to Improve the Prevention of PJI (27–34)
3.6. What Other Post-Operative Action Could Be Implemented to Improve the Prevention of PJI (35–40)
3.7. The Role and Suitability of the Current Guidelines (41–47)
4. Limitations and Conclusions
5. Recommendations
- Modifiable risk factors should be optimized prior to surgery
- Patient education should involve skin cleaning techniques using a remnant antiseptic solution
- Alcoholic chlorhexidine offers greater protection than alcoholic povidone–iodine against PJI
- Alcohol-based solutions should be used in surgical hand preparation
- A standardized approach to the use of antiseptics should be in place, with particular attention to the incision site
- Antibiotic prophylaxis should be administered prior to surgery and not routinely prolonged
- Traffic and number of personnel in the operating room should be kept to a minimum
- Tranexamic acid and hemostatic agent use should be optimized to reduce the need for a surgical drain
- Structured surveillance and reporting protocols for PJI should be in place
- Specific guidelines for PJI should be developed and implemented; these should be tailored to individual patient risk factors
- Guidelines based on level 1 or 2 evidence should be considered mandatory
- Infections that appear 30 days post-surgery may still be considered to be PJI.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No: | Statement | Score |
---|---|---|
1 | The prevention and mitigation of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) requires a multi-disciplinary approach | 98% |
2 | Modifiable risk factors should always be optimized prior to any surgery | 99% |
3 | Patient education is important when preventing and mitigating periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) according to risk factor | 98% |
4 | The risk of surgery should be determined by the surgeon informing the patient about the individual risk factors | 97% |
5 | The individual patient risk of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) should be agreed via a shared decision-making process | 90% |
6 | The patients should be empowered/encouraged to act and reduce their individual risk factors prior surgery (dietary, tobacco, alcohol) | 98% |
7 | For high-risk patients, more focused information about preventing and mitigating periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is required | 98% |
8 | All elective-surgery patients should be requested to cleanse skin at home prior to surgery | 93% |
9 | Cleansing at home should be done using a CHG-based soap or scrub solution | 88% |
No: | Statement | Score |
---|---|---|
10 | Patient education about skin preparation is a vital part of effective periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) prevention | 93% |
11 | Appropriate training of surgeons and nurses in periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) prevention helps reduce infection rates | 98% |
12 | Appropriate training on optimal skin preparation techniques is effective in reducing periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) rates | 98% |
13 | It is important to reduce any skin colonization prior to attending surgery by using an antiseptic solution | 92% |
14 | The use of antiseptics is an important part of skin preparation | 97% |
15 | Not all antiseptic solutions are equal | 94% |
16 | Alcoholic chlorhexidine is significantly more protective than alcoholic povidone–iodine against both superficial incisional infections and deep incisional infections | 75% |
17 | The remanence of the antiseptic used for skin preparation impacts the level of periprosthetic joint infection prevention | 87% |
18 | Having visibility of where the antiseptic is applied impacts the level of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) prevention | 92% |
19 | The method of application of skin antiseptics is of high importance in maximizing their efficacy | 90% |
20 | A standardized approach to applying and utilizing antiseptics improves the prevention of periprosthetic joint (PJI) infections | 97% |
21 | Greater importance should be given to applying the antiseptic solution at the incision site | 93% |
No: | Statement | Score |
---|---|---|
22 | There should be strict measures to limit the risk of contamination when the patient is transferred from the ward to the operating room | 85% |
23 | Hair removal should be undertaken (if necessary) immediately prior to entering the operating room | 78% |
24 | Hair removal is only recommended using clippers, not razors | 91% |
25 | Surgical hand preparation should be achieved via the use of alcohol-based solutions to improve the prevention of periprosthetic joint infection | 95% |
26 | Antibiotics should always be administered prophylactically to the patient prior to surgery | 97% |
No: | Statement | Score |
---|---|---|
27 | Incise drapes should not be mandatory in total joint replacement surgery | 63% |
28 | Disposable drapes should be mandatory in total joint replacement surgery | 92% |
29 | Devices or surgical drains that interact with the wound site should be avoided | 83% |
30 | The use of tranexamic acid or hemostatic agents makes the use of surgical drains optional | 82% |
31 | Decreasing hematoma (using tranexamic acid, hemostatic agents, or other) helps to reduce the risk of infection and avoid wound healing complications | 98% |
32 | The choice of skin suturing technique strongly impacts the risk of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) | 61% |
33 | Shortening the surgical procedure duration reduces the risk of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in total joint replacement procedures | 98% |
34 | Traffic should be kept minimal in the operating room during the time of surgery | 99% |
No: | Statement | Score |
---|---|---|
35 | Prolonging surgical antibiotic prophylaxis does not reduce the risk of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in total joint replacement surgery | 91% |
36 | Using advanced wound dressings reduces the risk of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in total joint replacement surgery | 81% |
37 | The surgeon should review the patient operative wound periodically during the first month post-surgery | 69% |
38 | Knowing and monitoring periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) rates proactively is essential to effective prevention | 96% |
39 | Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) occurrences should be reported in a structured way in the surgical department | 98% |
40 | An infection that appears >30 days post-surgery is not considered to be a periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) | 15% |
No: | Statement | Score |
---|---|---|
41 | There is a need for focused recommendations about the prevention of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in total joint surgery | 98% |
42 | Available guidelines need to be tailored to the individual risk factors of the patient | 94% |
43 | There is a need to audit the compliance to recommendations followed | 94% |
44 | Recommendations supported by Level 1 or 2 evidence should be considered mandatory | 97% |
45 | When Level 1 or 2 evidence is lacking, other sources of evidence should be used to inform the prevention of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in total joint replacement surgery | 95% |
46 | Local (hospital-based) recommendations should supersede international guidance in areas where evidence is lacking or divergent | 77% |
47 | The majority of available recommendations are not implemented in practice | 50% |
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Gómez-Barrena, E.; Warren, T.; Walker, I.; Jain, N.; Kort, N.; Loubignac, F.; Newman, S.; Perka, C.; Spinarelli, A.; Whitehouse, M.R.; et al. Prevention of Periprosthetic Joint Infection in Total Hip and Knee Replacement: One European Consensus. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 381. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11020381
Gómez-Barrena E, Warren T, Walker I, Jain N, Kort N, Loubignac F, Newman S, Perka C, Spinarelli A, Whitehouse MR, et al. Prevention of Periprosthetic Joint Infection in Total Hip and Knee Replacement: One European Consensus. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(2):381. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11020381
Chicago/Turabian StyleGómez-Barrena, Enrique, Timothy Warren, Ian Walker, Neil Jain, Nanne Kort, François Loubignac, Simon Newman, Carsten Perka, Antonio Spinarelli, Michael R. Whitehouse, and et al. 2022. "Prevention of Periprosthetic Joint Infection in Total Hip and Knee Replacement: One European Consensus" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 2: 381. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11020381
APA StyleGómez-Barrena, E., Warren, T., Walker, I., Jain, N., Kort, N., Loubignac, F., Newman, S., Perka, C., Spinarelli, A., Whitehouse, M. R., Zagra, L., & De la Torre, B. J. (2022). Prevention of Periprosthetic Joint Infection in Total Hip and Knee Replacement: One European Consensus. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(2), 381. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11020381