Author:
López-Álvarez Marina,Heuker Marjolein,Sjollema Klaas A.,van Dam Gooitzen M.,van Dijl Jan Maarten,IJpma Frank F. A.,van Oosten Marleen
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Fracture-related infection (FRI) is a serious complication in orthopedic trauma surgery worldwide. Especially, the distinction of infection from sterile inflammation and the detection of low-grade infection are highly challenging. The objective of the present study was to obtain proof-of-principle for the use of bacteria-targeted fluorescence imaging to detect FRI on extracted osteosynthesis devices as a step-up towards real-time image-guided trauma surgery.
Methods
Extracted osteosynthesis devices from 13 patients, who needed revision surgery after fracture treatment, were incubated with a near-infrared fluorescent tracer composed of the antibiotic vancomycin and the fluorophore IRDye800CW (i.e., vanco-800CW). Subsequently, the devices were imaged, and vanco-800CW fluorescence signals were correlated to the results of microbiological culturing and to bacterial growth upon replica plating of the imaged devices on blood agar.
Results
Importantly, compared to culturing, the bacteria-targeted fluorescence imaging of extracted osteosynthesis devices with vanco-800CW allows for a prompt diagnosis of FRI, reducing the time-to-result from days to less than 30 min. Moreover, bacteria-targeted imaging can provide surgeons with real-time visual information on the presence and extent of infection.
Conclusion
Here, we present the first clinical application of fluorescence imaging for the detection of FRI. We conclude that imaging with vanco-800CW can provide early, accurate, and real-time visual diagnostic information on FRI in the clinical setting, even in the case of low-grade infections.
Graphical abstract
Funder
H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions
Graduate School of Medical Sciences of the University of Groningen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine
Cited by
10 articles.
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