Lab Medicine Significance 7/10

Four Perioperative Samples on Three Culture Media Suffice for Prosthetic Joint Infection Diagnosis

A prospective multicenter study of 264 suspected prosthetic joint infections established that four perioperative tissue samples cultured on three media (blood culture bottle, chocolate agar, and Schaedler broth) achieve 99.7% agreement with the standard five-sample, five-media protocol. PJI was confirmed in 215 cases, with bacteriological criteria met in 89%. This optimized protocol reduces laboratory workload and costs while maintaining diagnostic accuracy for this challenging clinical scenario.

The original study

How Many Samples and How Many Culture Media To Diagnose a Prosthetic Joint Infection: a Clinical and Microbiological Prospective Multicenter Study.

Authors
Bémer P, Léger J, Tandé D, Plouzeau C, Valentin AS, Jolivet-Gougeon A, et al.
Journal
Journal of clinical microbiology
Type
Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PMID
26637380
Read the original study →

Original abstract

Although numerous perioperative samples and culture media are required to diagnose prosthetic joint infection (PJI), their exact number and types have not yet been definitely determined with a high level of proof. We conducted a prospective multicenter study to determine the minimal number of samples and culture media required for accurate diagnosis of PJI. Over a 2-year period, consecutive patients with clinical signs suggesting PJI were included, with five perioperative samples per patient. The bacteriological and PJI diagnosis criteria were assessed using a random selection of two, three, or four samples and compared with those obtained using the recommended five samples (references guidelines). The results obtained with two or three culture media were then compared with those obtained with five culture media for both criteria. The times-to-positivity of the different culture media were calculated. PJI was confirmed in 215/264 suspected cases, with a bacteriological criterion in 192 (89%). The PJI was monomicrobial (85%) or polymicrobial (15%). Percentages of agreement of 98.1% and 99.7%, respectively, for the bacteriological criterion and confirmed PJI diagnosis were obtained when four perioperative samples were considered. The highest percentages of agreement were obtained with the association of three culture media, a blood culture bottle, a chocolate agar plate, and Schaedler broth, incubated for 5, 7, and 14 days, respectively. This new procedure leads to significant cost saving. Our prospective multicenter study showed that four samples seeded on three culture media are sufficient for diagnosing PJI.