Bacteriophages are natural viruses of interest in the field of PJI. A paper previously reported the PhagoDAIR procedure (use of phages during DAIR) in three patients with PJI for whom explantation was not desirable. As the need to isolate the pathogen before surgery to perform phage susceptibility testing is a strong hindrance for the development of this procedure, we developed post-operative phage injections using ultrasound, in patients infected with We performed a single center, exploratory, prospective cohort study including patients with knee PJI who received phage therapy with ultrasound after performance of a DAIR or a partial prosthesis exchange. All patients had PJI requiring conservative surgery and suppressive antimicrobial therapy (SAT) as salvage procedure. Each case was discussed in multidisciplinary meetings in agreement with French health authority, based on the clinical presentation, and the phage susceptibility testing. The cocktail of highly concentrate active phages (5 mL; about 10e9 PFU/mL) was extemporaneous prepared and administered three times directly into the joint using sonography (1 injection per week during 3 weeks) during the postoperative period, before switching antibiotics to SAT.Background
Materials/Methods
Exebacase, an antistaphylococcal lysin in Phase 3 of development as a treatment for We performed a single center, exploratory, open-label prospective study using the LysinDAIR procedure in patients with chronic (inoculation >3 months prior to treatment) coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) PJI of the knee with two different clinical presentations and treatment paradigms. Cohort A: first episode of CNS knee PJI, for whom the LysinDAIR was followed by clindamycin + levofloxacin planned to be prescribed for three months and then stopped; and Cohort B: relapsing episodes of MDR CNS knee PJI for whom the LysinDAIR was followed by primary antimicrobial therapy for three months, followed by suppressive antimicrobial therapy (SAT). Exebacae susceptibility testing was performed before treatment for each patient. In agreement with the French Health authority, exebacase (2 to 3.5 total mg in 30–50 ml (∼0.067 – 0.075 mg/m) was administered directly into the joint during arthroscopy.Background
Materials/methods
Tedizolid is an oxazolidinone antibiotic that: (i) is recommended at the dose of 200 once daily in patients with skin and soft tissue infection; (ii) seems to have a better long-term hematological and neurological safety profile in comparison with linezolid; (iii) remains active on multidrug-resistant (MDR) Gram-positive pathogens. Consequently, it might represent an option as suppressive antimicrobial treatment (SAT) in patients with complex implant-associated bone and joint infection (BJI) due to MDR Gram-positive pathogens. We performed a cohort study (2017–2020) to evaluate the long-term safety of tedizolid (200mg qd) as SAT in patients with implant-associated BJI. In all cases, the use of tedizolid was validated as the last oral treatment option during multidisciplinar meetings in a reference center for the management of BJI. Serious adverse events, any reason for discontinuation, and standard biological data, were prospectively collected.Aim
Method
The aim of this study was to confirm that Mirra's criterion (≥ 5 Polymorphonuclears (PMNs) per field in 5 high power fields (HPFs)) is not adequate for diagnosis of chronic bone and joint infections (BJIs) due to We retrospectively selected 25 patients from 2009 to 2013 with chronic BJIs due to Aim
Methods