1. Percutaneous CT guided bone biopsy for suspected osteomyelitis: Diagnostic yield and impact on patient’s treatment change and recovery
- Author
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Diana Hoang, Stephen Fisher, Avneesh Chhabra, Javier La Fontaine, and Orhan K. Öz
- Subjects
Adult ,Image-Guided Biopsy ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,Bone and Bones ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Serology ,Lesion ,Bone Infection ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Statistical significance ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Osteomyelitis ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Sacrum ,medicine.disease ,Ischium ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Surgery ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the utility of percutaneous CT guided bone biopsy (PCBB) for suspected osteomyelitis (OM) and its eventual impact on patient management and recovery. Material and methods: Patients who received a PCBB for suspected osteomyelitis from years 2012-2018. Patient demographics, lesion location, ulcer grade, signs of toxemia, serology, wound and blood cultures, bone biopsy and cross-sectional imaging results were recorded. Diagnostic yield of the bone biopsy and its role in influencing the final treatment plan and patient recovery were evaluated. Chi-square test was used. P-value less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: 115 patients with mean age 50.86 ± 14.49 years were included. The common locations were sacrum/ischium (49/115, 43%) and spine (35/115, 30%). Clinically, 40/115 (35%) had toxemia and 67/115 (58%) had ulcers. Per serology, 17/111 (15%), 95/106 (90%), and 86/98 (88%) had an elevated WBC, CRP, and sedimentation rate, respectively. 22/91 (24%) had a positive blood culture and all 23/23 had a positive wound culture. On imaging, definitive and possible OM were reported in 84.1% and 14.2%, respectively, with 1.8% as no OM. Only 24/115 (21%) had a positive bone biopsy culture and only 10/24 (42%) total positive bone cultures impacted the treatment plan. There was no significant effect of antibiotics on the diagnostic yield of culture (p = 0.08). No statistical significance was found when comparing treatment change based on bone culture results versus all other factors combined (p = 0.33), or when comparing clinical improvement with and without positive bone cultures (p = 0.12). Conclusion: Despite positive cross-sectional imaging findings of OM, bone biopsy yield of positive culture is low, and it leads to a small impact in changing the treatment plan or altering the course of patient recovery.
- Published
- 2019
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