Adjuvant treatment of chronic osteomyelitis of the tibia following exogenous trauma using OSTEOSET®-T: a review of 21 patients in a regional trauma centre

JOURNAL TITLE: Strategies in Trauma and Limb Reconstruction

Author
1. Gemma Humm
2. Philippa Bridgeman
3. Saqib Noor
4. Deepa Bose
5. Michael David
ISSN
1828-8936
DOI
10.1007/s11751-014-0206-y
Volume
9
Issue
3
Publishing Year
2014
Pages
5
Author Affiliations
    1. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Mindelsohn Way, Birmingham B15 2GW, UK
    1. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Mindelsohn Way, Birmingham B15 2GW, UK
    1. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Mindelsohn Way, Birmingham B15 2GW, UK
    1. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Mindelsohn Way, Birmingham B15 2GW, UK
    1. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Mindelsohn Way, Birmingham B15 2GW, UK
  • Article keywords
    Osteomyelitis, Tibia, Trauma, Osteoset, Antibiotic

    Abstract

    Surgical debridement and prolonged systemic antibiotic therapy are an established management strategy for infection after tibial fractures. Local antibiotic delivery via cement beads has shown improved outcome but requires further surgery for extraction of beads. OSTEOSET®-T is a resorbable bone void filler composed of calcium sulphate and 4 % tobramycin that is packed easily into bone defects. This is a review of the outcomes of 21 patients treated with OSTEOSET®-T for osteomyelitis of the tibia. This is a retrospective case note and clinical review. In all cases, the strategy was debridement, with removal of any implants, with excision back to bleeding bone. OSTEOSET®-T pellets were packed into any contained defects or the intra-medullary canal with further bony stabilisation (n = 9) and soft tissue reconstruction (n = 7) undertaken as required. Intravenous vancomycin and meropenem were administered after sampling with substitution to targeted antibiotic therapy for between 6 weeks and 6 months. The average follow-up was 15 months. Union rate after tibial reconstruction was 100 %. Wound complications were encountered in 52 %: a wound discharge in the early post-operative period was noted in seven patients (33 %) independent of site of pellet placement. In the 14 cases without a wound leak, five developed wound complications (p = 0.06, Fisher's exact test) either from delayed wound-healing or pin-site infections. One patient developed a transient acute kidney injury and one refractory osteomyelitis. OSTEOSET®-T is an effective adjunct in the treatment of chronic tibial osteomyelitis following trauma based on the low incidence of relapse of infection within the period of follow-up in this study, but significant wound complications and one transient nephrotoxic event were also recorded.

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