Multiplex Antibody Measurement for Post-treatment Follow-up of Staphylococcal Prosthetic Joint Infection: A Diagnostic Pilot Study. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Introduction: Multiplex-antibody detection has been recently proposed for the noninvasive diagnosis of staphylococcal prosthetic joint infection (PJI). We evaluated this approach for the post-treatment follow-up of patients. Methods: Nineteen cases of staphylococcal PJI were prospectively followed for one year after treatment. The IgG response against eight staphylococcal antigens was measured before surgery and one year post-surgery using Luminex technology (Austin, TX, USA); median fluorescence intensity values determined for each antigen were transformed into a "Total Response Index" (TRI). Results: Patients (11 women/8 men) had a mean (SD) age of 72.2 (12.4) years. Site of prosthesis was the knee (n=10), the hip (n=8) and the shoulder (n=1). Ten patients were infected by S. epidermidis, six by S. aureus, and three by S. lugdunensis. TRI values at one year were significantly lower than pre-surgery values (mean [SD]: 5.9 [1.8] versus 8.1 [3.4], p=0.02) and decreased, on average, by 21.2%. TRI values markedly increased in two patients. One patient had a relapse of S. aureus PJI at five months post-surgery, with a 37% increase of the TRI. The other had septic failure three months after revision for S. lugdunensis PJI; all intraoperative samples remained culture-negative, but the TRI increased by 51% and the antibody profile showed a marked change, suggesting a reinfection with another staphylococcal species. Conclusion: Multiplex-antibody measurement may be useful for the follow-up of staphylococcal PJI and may help to detect septic failure involving organisms targeted by the assay.

authors

  • Bauer, Thomas
  • Marmor, Simon
  • Ghout, Idir
  • Salomon, Elsa
  • Sayed, Faten El
  • Heym, Beate
  • Rottman, Martin
  • Gaillard, Jean-Louis
  • Roux, Anne-Laure

publication date

  • September 26, 2019

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6831810

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85105355228

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.7150/jbji.36015

PubMed ID

  • 31700771

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 4

issue

  • 5