AI Article Synopsis

  • C. acnes is the main bacterium linked to shoulder periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs), often found in samples from revision surgeries, raising questions about its source—patient skin versus external contamination.
  • Whole-genome sequencing of C. acnes from patients revealed a strong genetic similarity between the bacteria found in surgical samples and those colonizing the patient's skin, indicating that infections typically originate from the patient rather than outside sources.
  • The study suggests that while some C. acnes phylotypes may be slightly more virulent, all types are capable of causing PJIs, with certain genetic traits linked to the progression from acute to chronic infections.

Article Abstract

Background: Cutibacterium acnes is the bacterium most commonly responsible for shoulder periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) and is often cultured from samples obtained at the time of revision for failed shoulder arthroplasty. We sought to determine whether these bacteria originate from the patient or from exogenous sources. We also sought to identify which C. acnes genetic traits were associated with the development of shoulder PJI.

Methods: We performed bacterial whole-genome sequencing of C. acnes from a single-institution repository of cultures obtained before or during primary and revision shoulder arthroplasty and correlated the molecular epidemiology and genetic content of strains with clinical features of infection.

Results: A total of 341 isolates collected over a 4-year period from 88 patients were sequenced. C. acnes cultured from surgical specimens demonstrated significant similarity to the strains colonizing the skin of the same patient (P < .001). Infrequently, there was evidence of strains shared across unrelated patients, suggesting that exogenous sources of C. acnes culture-positivity were uncommon. Phylotypes IB and II were modestly associated with clinical features of PJI, but all phylotypes appeared inherently capable of causing disease. Chronic shoulder PJI was associated with the absence of common C. acnes genes involved in bacterial quorum-sensing (luxS, tqsA).

Conclusion: C. acnes strains cultured from deep intraoperative sources during revision shoulder arthroplasty demonstrate strong genetic similarity to the strains colonizing a patient's skin. Some phylotypes of C. acnes commonly colonizing human skin are modestly more virulent than others, but all phylotypes have a capacity for PJI. C. acnes cultured from cases of PJI commonly demonstrated genetic hallmarks associated with adaptation from acute to chronic phases of infection. This is the strongest evidence to date supporting the role of the patient's own, cutaneous C. acnes strains in the pathogenesis of shoulder arthroplasty infection. Our findings support the importance of further research focused on perioperative decolonization and management of endogenous bacteria that are likely to be introduced into the arthroplasty wound at the time of skin incision.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jse.2024.02.039DOI Listing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11663454PMC

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