Publish date: 27 June 2023
New antibiotic bone cement found not to reduce infection after hip fracture surgery
A large study has found that using high-dose dual-antibiotic loaded cement is unlikely to reduce the risk of infection in people who have had hip replacement surgery for their hip fracture.
Bone cement is commonly used to fix surgical implants to the patient’s bone during hip replacement. In recent years, there has been a significant increase in the use of antibiotic-loaded bone cement in hip fractures treated with a partial hip replacement or ‘hemiarthroplasty’ – where the the broken head of the thigh bone is replaced with a metal implant.
In this study, the research team compared the rate of ‘deep surgical site infection’ – infection around the hip implant - in patients aged over 60 receiving high-dose dual-antibiotic loaded cement with standard care single-antibiotic-loaded cement. The findings have been published in the Lancet.
The study, called the White 8 Trial, was led by researchers from the University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology, and Musculoskeletal Sciences (NDORMS) and supported by the NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre (BRC). It is sponsored by Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and managed by Oxford Trauma and Emergency Care, at the University of Oxford.
The co-lead author, Professor Matt Costa of NDORMS, said: “Over the last two years, based upon previous smaller trial data, there has been a big increase in the use of high-dose, dual-antibiotic bone cement. However, this large-scale trial shows that there is unlikely to be a benefit in terms of reducing the risk of infection in the hip replacement.
“Furthermore, the economic analysis in this trial, suggests that the more expensive high-dose dual antibiotic cement is unlikely to be cost-effective. I would anticipate that these findings will change clinical practice and reverse the trend of using this new bone cement and save money for the NHS.”
Almost 5,000 patients undergoing cemented hemiarthroplasty at 26 UK hospitals took part in the trial. Half were randomly allocated to a standard care single-antibiotic loaded cement, with the other half given the high-dose dual-antibiotic loaded cement. The level of deep surgical site infection was then measured after 90 days.
Some 1.7% of the participants in the single-antibiotic loaded cement had a deep surgical site infection after 90 days, compared to 1.2% of those in the high-dose dual-antibiotic loaded cement group.
The trial also found that there was no difference in quality of life, mortality, antibiotic use, mobility and residential status after 120 days.