Opioid Use Disorder Is Associated with an Increased Risk of Infection after Total Joint Arthroplasty: A Large Database Study

Jul 15, 2020Clinical orthopaedics and related research

Opioid Use Disorder Linked to Higher Infection Risk After Joint Replacement Surgery

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Abstract

Patients with opioid use disorder undergoing primary total hip arthroplasty have a 1.85 times higher risk of surgical site infection within 90 days.

  • Opioid use disorder is associated with an increased risk of surgical site infections (SSIs) and prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) after total joint arthroplasty.
  • Increased risk of SSI was observed at 90 days for primary total hip arthroplasty (OR 1.85) and primary total knee arthroplasty (OR 1.72).
  • Patients undergoing revision total hip arthroplasty had a 90-day SSI risk of OR 1.89, while revision total knee arthroplasty had a risk of OR 1.88.
  • The risk of PJIs at 2 years was also elevated for primary total hip arthroplasty (OR 1.66) and primary total knee arthroplasty (OR 1.31).
  • For revision surgeries, the risk of PJI was significantly higher, with OR 4.24 for revision total hip arthroplasty and OR 4.94 for revision total knee arthroplasty.

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