The Journal of Arthroplasty, Volume 35, Issue 8, 2230 - 2236

Plasma Fibrinogen Performs Better Than Plasma d-Dimer and Fibrin Degradation Product in the Diagnosis of Periprosthetic Joint Infection and Determination of Reimplantation Timing

Wu, Hao et al.
Hip Knee

Background

The accurate and timely diagnosis of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is challenging, and no single biomarker can definitively confirm infection before revision arthroplasty. The coagulation cascade has been linked closely to infection. This study was performed to determine the value of plasma d-dimer, plasma fibrinogen, and plasma fibrin degradation product (FDP) for the diagnosis of PJI and timing of reimplantation.

Methods

We retrospectively enrolled 136 patients who underwent revision surgery from January 2008 to December 2019. They were assigned to 3 groups: aseptic failure (group A), PJI (group B), and reimplantation (group C). Receiver operating characteristic curves were constructed to estimate the value of plasma fibrinogen, plasma d-dimer, plasma FDP, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) for PJI diagnosis and reimplantation timing.

Results

All biomarker levels were significantly higher in group B than in group A ( P < .05), and plasma fibrinogen, CRP, and ESR values were significantly higher in group B than in group C (all P < .05). The receiver operating characteristic curves showed that the areas under the curve of plasma fibrinogen, plasma d-dimer, plasma FDP, CRP, and ESR were 0.848, 0.914, 0.728, 0.737, and 0.868, respectively, and the threshold values for plasma fibrinogen, plasma d-dimer, and plasma FDP were 3.61 g/L, 0.41 mg/L, and 3.55 mg/L, respectively.

Conclusion

Plasma fibrinogen exhibits good value for the diagnosis of PJI and can be an indicator of residual infection before reimplantation in 2-stage arthroplasty. Plasma d-dimer and FDP are of limited value for PJI diagnosis and cannot be used to determine the timing of reimplantation.

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