Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection?

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Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection? / Ohrt-Nissen, Søren; Fritz, Blaine; Valentin, Lars; Kragh, Kasper Nørskov; Manniche, Claus; Dahl, Benny; Bjarnsholt, Thomas.

In: European Spine Journal, No. 28, 2019, p. 2996–3002.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ohrt-Nissen, S, Fritz, B, Valentin, L, Kragh, KN, Manniche, C, Dahl, B & Bjarnsholt, T 2019, 'Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection?', European Spine Journal, no. 28, pp. 2996–3002. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00586-019-06004-2

APA

Ohrt-Nissen, S., Fritz, B., Valentin, L., Kragh, K. N., Manniche, C., Dahl, B., & Bjarnsholt, T. (2019). Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection? European Spine Journal, (28), 2996–3002. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00586-019-06004-2

Vancouver

Ohrt-Nissen S, Fritz B, Valentin L, Kragh KN, Manniche C, Dahl B et al. Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection? European Spine Journal. 2019;(28):2996–3002. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00586-019-06004-2

Author

Ohrt-Nissen, Søren ; Fritz, Blaine ; Valentin, Lars ; Kragh, Kasper Nørskov ; Manniche, Claus ; Dahl, Benny ; Bjarnsholt, Thomas. / Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection?. In: European Spine Journal. 2019 ; No. 28. pp. 2996–3002.

Bibtex

@article{6154206a832042a08c3e9c673286f00a,
title = "Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection?",
abstract = "Hypothesis: To assess whether a chronic bacterial infection is present in a subset of patients with pseudarthrosis after instrumented spinal fusion. Methods: This was a prospective diagnostic study including adult patients with previous instrumented spinal fusion. Patients underwent revision surgery for either pseudarthrosis or other causes (e.g. implant removal, curve progression or junctional kyphosis) (control group). Five separate biopsies were randomly collected, intraoperatively, from the pseudarthrosis site and cultivated under both aerobic (5 days) and anaerobic (14 days) conditions. If cultivation was positive in at least 2/5 tissue samples, the biopsy was sectioned and stained using peptide nucleic acid fluorescence in situ hybridization (PNA-FISH). Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used to examine the sections and visualize bacterial aggregates. Results: The study included 32 pseudarthrosis and 32 control patients. Cultivation yielded bacteria in at least 1/5 biopsies in 52% of patients with no difference between the groups (p = 1.0). Bacteria of the same species was found in at least 2/5 samples in seven pseudarthrosis patients and four controls (p = 0.509). Propionibacterium acnes was found in 8 of these 11 samples. Microscopy demonstrated tissue-embedded bacterial aggregates in two of these patients but with no inflammatory cells indicating an active infection. The presence of bacteria was not associated with the number of previous spinal procedures or the pre-revision fusion length (p ≥ 0.503). Conclusions: Pseudarthrosis after instrumented spinal surgery was not significantly associated with the presence of bacteria at the pseudarthrosis site. Positive cultivation results are common after spinal instrumentation, but our results indicate that they rarely represent an organized infection. Graphical abstract: These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.[Figure not available: see fulltext.].",
keywords = "Adult spinal deformity, Infection, Non-union, Pseudarthrosis, Spinal instrumentation",
author = "S{\o}ren Ohrt-Nissen and Blaine Fritz and Lars Valentin and Kragh, {Kasper N{\o}rskov} and Claus Manniche and Benny Dahl and Thomas Bjarnsholt",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1007/s00586-019-06004-2",
language = "English",
pages = "2996–3002",
journal = "European Spine Journal",
issn = "0940-6719",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "28",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Is pseudarthrosis after spinal instrumentation caused by a chronic infection?

AU - Ohrt-Nissen, Søren

AU - Fritz, Blaine

AU - Valentin, Lars

AU - Kragh, Kasper Nørskov

AU - Manniche, Claus

AU - Dahl, Benny

AU - Bjarnsholt, Thomas

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Hypothesis: To assess whether a chronic bacterial infection is present in a subset of patients with pseudarthrosis after instrumented spinal fusion. Methods: This was a prospective diagnostic study including adult patients with previous instrumented spinal fusion. Patients underwent revision surgery for either pseudarthrosis or other causes (e.g. implant removal, curve progression or junctional kyphosis) (control group). Five separate biopsies were randomly collected, intraoperatively, from the pseudarthrosis site and cultivated under both aerobic (5 days) and anaerobic (14 days) conditions. If cultivation was positive in at least 2/5 tissue samples, the biopsy was sectioned and stained using peptide nucleic acid fluorescence in situ hybridization (PNA-FISH). Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used to examine the sections and visualize bacterial aggregates. Results: The study included 32 pseudarthrosis and 32 control patients. Cultivation yielded bacteria in at least 1/5 biopsies in 52% of patients with no difference between the groups (p = 1.0). Bacteria of the same species was found in at least 2/5 samples in seven pseudarthrosis patients and four controls (p = 0.509). Propionibacterium acnes was found in 8 of these 11 samples. Microscopy demonstrated tissue-embedded bacterial aggregates in two of these patients but with no inflammatory cells indicating an active infection. The presence of bacteria was not associated with the number of previous spinal procedures or the pre-revision fusion length (p ≥ 0.503). Conclusions: Pseudarthrosis after instrumented spinal surgery was not significantly associated with the presence of bacteria at the pseudarthrosis site. Positive cultivation results are common after spinal instrumentation, but our results indicate that they rarely represent an organized infection. Graphical abstract: These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.[Figure not available: see fulltext.].

AB - Hypothesis: To assess whether a chronic bacterial infection is present in a subset of patients with pseudarthrosis after instrumented spinal fusion. Methods: This was a prospective diagnostic study including adult patients with previous instrumented spinal fusion. Patients underwent revision surgery for either pseudarthrosis or other causes (e.g. implant removal, curve progression or junctional kyphosis) (control group). Five separate biopsies were randomly collected, intraoperatively, from the pseudarthrosis site and cultivated under both aerobic (5 days) and anaerobic (14 days) conditions. If cultivation was positive in at least 2/5 tissue samples, the biopsy was sectioned and stained using peptide nucleic acid fluorescence in situ hybridization (PNA-FISH). Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used to examine the sections and visualize bacterial aggregates. Results: The study included 32 pseudarthrosis and 32 control patients. Cultivation yielded bacteria in at least 1/5 biopsies in 52% of patients with no difference between the groups (p = 1.0). Bacteria of the same species was found in at least 2/5 samples in seven pseudarthrosis patients and four controls (p = 0.509). Propionibacterium acnes was found in 8 of these 11 samples. Microscopy demonstrated tissue-embedded bacterial aggregates in two of these patients but with no inflammatory cells indicating an active infection. The presence of bacteria was not associated with the number of previous spinal procedures or the pre-revision fusion length (p ≥ 0.503). Conclusions: Pseudarthrosis after instrumented spinal surgery was not significantly associated with the presence of bacteria at the pseudarthrosis site. Positive cultivation results are common after spinal instrumentation, but our results indicate that they rarely represent an organized infection. Graphical abstract: These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.[Figure not available: see fulltext.].

KW - Adult spinal deformity

KW - Infection

KW - Non-union

KW - Pseudarthrosis

KW - Spinal instrumentation

U2 - 10.1007/s00586-019-06004-2

DO - 10.1007/s00586-019-06004-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31087166

AN - SCOPUS:85065718971

SP - 2996

EP - 3002

JO - European Spine Journal

JF - European Spine Journal

SN - 0940-6719

IS - 28

ER -

ID: 226876254