Synovial fluid aspiration is often used to gather information about a possible periprosthetic infection.
When a sufficient volume is recovered, laboratory tests may help surgeons evaluate the likelihood of a periprosthetic infection; however the aspiration attempt may not yield fluid even if it is image guided. To be clinically useful, the aspiration needs to be carried out several weeks in advance of a potential surgical revision to allow sufficient time for laboratory tests and culture results to be finalized.
The authors of Synovial Fluid Cutibacterium acnes Antigen Is Detected Among Shoulder Samples with High Inflammation and Early Culture Growth presented a three pronged analysis of 1,365 de-identified synovial fluid samples, of which 1,150 were culture-negative and 215 were culture-positive. 94 of the culture positive samples were positive for Cutibacterium and 121 for other organisms.
The samples were analyzed by (1) time to culture positivity (known to be a reflection of the load of bacteria in the sample), (2) a validated C. acnes antigen immunoassay test, and (3) a synovial fluid inflammation score calculated from 4 tests on synovial fluid: C reactive protein, alpha-defensin, WBC count and percent polymorphonuclear cells.
They found that
(1) The samples tended to cluster into high inflammation and low inflammation groups for both all specimens
(2) C. acnes antigen levels demonstrated moderate-strong positive correlation with inflammation, with 166-fold higher levels of C. acnes antigen in high-inflammation samples compared with low-inflammation samples.
(3) The days to C. acnes culture positivity demonstrated weak- inverse correlation with inflammation, with 1.5-fold earlier growth among the 67 high- inflammation samples compared to the low inflammation samples. Because a positive culture depends on discernible colonies on the culture plate and because the threshold for discernability relates to the number of bacteria present, low loads of bacteria in the sample are expected to have longer time to culture positivity.
The relationship between C acnes antigen levels (left) and days to culture positivity (right) for samples with low inflammation and high inflammation is shown below.
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