Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurological Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
In 2021, several patients across the United States received bone allograft contaminated with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB). TB is typically a pulmonary infection with many possible extrapulmonary manifestations, including skeletal tuberculosis. However, TB is a rare causative organism of postoperative surgical site infection. Iatrogenic skeletal TB infections are not widely reported in the medical literature; therefore, treatment and associated outcomes are relatively unknown. In this series, the authors report 6 cases of patients who received a mesenchymal stem cell–enhanced bone graft infected with TB at their institution, including the clinical courses, imaging findings, management plans, and outcomes at 1 year postoperatively.
METHODS
A retrospective review was performed of 6 consecutive patients who underwent spinal fusion surgery at the authors’ institution and received bone graft from a lot contaminated with TB. Collected data included patient demographic characteristics, indications for surgery, surgical procedures performed, timing of contamination discovery, medical treatment, and follow-up information including reoperation, healing progress, and imaging findings.
RESULTS
Five of 6 patients (83.3%) eventually tested positive for TB via interferon-gamma release assay or wound culture. They experienced significant complications, including surgical site infections with neck swelling, pain, dysphagia, and wound dehiscence. Extensive soft-tissue infection was common; however, significant bony involvement was not observed. Surgical wound debridement was required in 4 patients, and all patients received medical management with standard RIPE (rifampin, isoniazid pyrazinamide, pyridoxine, and ethambutol) therapy for 8 weeks with extension of rifampin and isoniazid for scheduled 12 months. All patients (excluding 1 patient who died of COVID-19) showed signs of improvement with adequately healing wounds at the most recent follow-up at a median (range) of 12 (6–13) months postoperatively. To date, no patients have developed pulmonary TB.
CONCLUSIONS
Direct inoculation with TB via contaminated bone grafts resulted in a high rate of severe soft-tissue infection, although extensive skeletal and pulmonary involvement has not been observed at 1 year postoperatively; this review includes the longest reported follow-up period for this TB outbreak. Medical management remains the mainstay of therapy for these patients, with most patients showing recovery with oral antibiotic therapy. The severity of these infections arising from mesenchymal stem cell–containing bone allografts that undergo an alternative sterilization process than standard allografts raises concerns regarding the added risks of infection, which should be weighed against the expected benefits of these grafts.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Reference40 articles.
1. Reduced surgical site infection rates following spine surgery using an enhanced prophylaxis protocol;Dessy AM,2017
2. Surgical site infections in spine surgery: identification of microbiologic and surgical characteristics in 239 cases;Abdul-Jabbar A,2013
3. A methodological, systematic review of evidence-based independent risk factors for surgical site infections after spinal surgery;Xing D,2013
4. Incidence, prevalence, and analysis of risk factors for surgical site infection following adult spinal surgery;Pull ter Gunne AF,2009
5. Investigating the efficacy of allograft cellular bone matrix for spinal fusion: a systematic review of the literature;Diaz RR,2021
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献