Abstract
Aim
A significant number of patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty surgery have C acnes contamination at the end of the primary surgery. The objective of this study is to determine whether patients with C acnes contamination at the end of their primary shoulder surgery have a worse prognosis than those who end up without C. acnes contamination.
Method
Prospective study including all patients who underwent a reverse shoulder prosthesis from January 2015 to December 2018. In all of them, 5 to 12 cultures were performed during primary surgery. The patients underwent surgery for shoulder arthritis secondary to rotator cuff tears, acute fracture of the proximal humerus, and sequelae of fracture of the proximal humerus. Exclusion criteria included the existence of previous surgeries on the affected shoulder, the presence of signs of infection, having received infiltrations and / or complementary invasive examinations (Arthro-MRI and Arthro-CT). Follow-up from 2 to 5 years. Functional assessment according to the Constant Functional Scale. All complications were also recorded.
Results
162 patients were included. Of these, 25 had positive cultures for C. acnes at the end of primary shoulder surgery. Average age of 74.8 years. 136 women and 26 men. 75.9% Shoulder arthritis secondary to rotator cuff tears, 13.6% acute fractures and 10.5% sequelae of fractures. There were no differences between patients with C. acnes and those without C. acnes regarding age and indication for surgery. Predominance of men in the group with positive C. acnes (p <0.001). No differences at 2 and 5 years in the Constant functional scale between the two groups (2 years, 59.6 vs 59.2 p 0.870) (5 years, 62.4 vs 59.5 p 0.360). Significant differences regarding the number of complications (p 0.001). Patients without C. acnes had 1 aseptic loosening of the metaglene and patients with C. acnes had 2 infections, 1 dislocation, and 1 revision surgery. Patients with contamination by C. acnes had more comorbidities (p 0.035) than patients without contamination.
Conclusions
Patients with C acnes contamination at the end of primary surgery do not have functional differences when compared with patients without contamination at 2 and 5 years, but they have a higher number of complications in the medium term.