To compare pre-referral microbiology and previous bone excision in long bone osteomyelitis with intra-operative microbiology from a specialist centre. A prospective observational cohort study of patients referred to a single tertiary centre who met the following criteria: (i) aged ≥18 years, (ii) received surgery for long bone osteomyelitis and (iii) met diagnostic criteria for long bone osteomyelitis. Patient demographics, referral microbiology and previous surgical history were collected at the time of initial clinic appointment. During surgery, a minimum of 5 intra-operative deep tissue samples were sent for microbiology. Antimicrobial options were classified from the results of susceptibility testing using the BACH classification of long bone osteomyelitis as either Ax (unknown or culture negative), A1 (good options available) or A2 (limited options available). The cultures and susceptibility of pre-referral microbiology were compared to the new intra-operative sampling results. In addition, an association between previous osteomyelitis excision and antimicrobial options were investigated.Aim
Method
To investigate self-reported quality of life (QoL) in patients with osteomyelitis referred to a specialist centre in the UK and investigate the relationship between QoL and BACH classification. All patients newly referred to a specialist bone infection clinic at a single tertiary centre within the UK between January 2019 and February 2020 were prospectively included. Diagnosis of osteomyelitis was made according to the presence of clinical and radiological criteria for ≥6 months. An EQ-5D-5L questionnaire and visual analogue score (VAS) were completed during the initial clinic appointment. Long-bone osteomyelitis was classified by the attending orthopaedic surgeon using the BACH classification system as either uncomplicated, complex or with limited options available.1 Patients managed non-operatively were subclassified into those who were (i) unfit to receive an operation or (ii) fit and well with stable disease. EQ-5D index scores were compared to a published UK value set of 41 chronic health conditions within the UK.2Aim
Method
This study assesses self-reported quality of life (QoL) in patients with osteomyelitis referred to a specialist centre in the UK. All patients newly referred to a specialist tertiary bone infection clinic within the UK between January 2019 and February 2020 were prospectively included. Diagnosis of osteomyelitis was made according to the presence of clinical and radiological criteria for ≥6 months. An EQ-5D-5L questionnaire and visual analogue score (VAS) were completed during the initial clinic appointment. Long-bone osteomyelitis was classified by the attending orthopaedic surgeon using the BACH classification system as either uncomplicated, complex or with limited options available. Patients managed non-operatively were subclassified into those who were (i) unfit to receive an operation or (ii) fit and well with stable disease. EQ-5D index scores were compared to a published UK value-set of 41 chronic health conditions within the UK.Introduction
Materials and Methods
Patients with long-bone osteomyelitis are frequently referred with limited microbiological information. This study compared pre-referral microbiology in long bone osteomyelitis with intra-operative microbiology from a specialist centre. All patients referred to a single tertiary centre between February 2019 and February 2020, aged ≥18 years and received surgery for confirmed long-bone osteomyelitis were included. Patient demographics, referral microbiology and previous surgical history were collected at the time of initial clinic appointment. During surgery, a minimum of 5 intra-operative deep tissue samples were sent for microbiology. Antimicrobial options were classified from the results of susceptibility testing using the BACH classification of long bone osteomyelitis as either Ax (unknown or culture negative), A1 (good options available) or A2 (limited options available). The cultures and susceptibility of pre-referral microbiology were compared to the new intra-operative sampling results. In addition, an association between previous osteomyelitis excision and antimicrobial options were investigated.Introduction
Materials and Methods