Background: Spine operations may be indicated for treatment of diseases including vertebral injuries, degenerative spinal conditions, disk disease, spinal misalignments, or malformations. Surgical site infection (SSI) is a clinically important complication of spine surgery. Staphylococcus aureus, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), is a leading cause of post-spinal SSIs.Methods: PubMed and applicable infectious disease conference proceedings were searched to identify relevant published studies. Overall, 343 full-text publications were screened for epidemiologic, mortality, health care resource utilization, and cost data on SSIs associated with specified spine operations.Results: Surgical site infection rates were identified in 161 studies from North America, Europe, and Asia. Pooled average SSI and S. aureus SSI rates for spine surgery were 1.9% (median, 3.3%; range, 0.1%–22.6%) and 1.0% (median, 2.0%; range, 0.02%–10.0%). Pooled average contribution of S. aureus infections to spinal SSIs was 49.3% (median, 50.0%; range, 16.7%–100%). Pooled average proportion of S. aureus SSIs attributable to MRSA was 37.9% (median, 42.5%; range, 0%–100%). Instrumented spinal fusion had the highest pooled average SSI rate (3.8%), followed by spinal decompression (1.8%) and spinal fusion (1.6%). The SSI-related mortality rate among spine surgical patients ranged from 1.1%–2.3% (three studies). All studies comparing SSI and control cohorts reported longer hospital stays for patients with SSIs. Pooled average SSI-associated re-admission rate occurring within 30 d from discharge ranged from 20% to 100% (four studies). Pooled average SSI-related re-operation rate was 67.1% (median, 100%; range, 33.5%–100%). According to two studies reporting direct costs, spine surgical patients incur approximately double the health care costs when they develop an SSI.Conclusions: Available published studies demonstrate a clinically important burden of SSIs related to spine operations and the substantial contribution of S. aureus (including MRSA). Preventive strategies aimed specifically at S. aureus SSIs could reduce health care costs and improve patient outcomes for spine operations.
In this study of healthy adults aged 50-85 and 18-24 years, SA3Ag elicited a rapid and robust immune response and was well tolerated, with no notable safety concerns.
Staphylococcus aureus is a Gram-positive pathogen that causes devastating disease and whose pathogenesis is dependent on interactions with host cell factors. Staphylococcal clumping factor A (ClfA) is a highly conserved fibrinogen (Fg)-binding protein and virulence factor that contributes to host tissue adhesion and initiation of infection. ClfA is being investigated as a possible component of a staphylococcal vaccine. We report the development of an Fg-binding assay that is specific for ClfA-mediated binding. Using the assay, we show that despite the presence of anti-ClfA antibodies, human sera from unvaccinated subjects are unable to prevent the binding of S. aureus to an Fg-coated surface. In contrast, antibodies elicited by a recombinant ClfA-containing vaccine were capable of blocking the ClfA-dependent binding of a diverse and clinically relevant collection of staphylococcal strains to Fg. These functional antibodies were also able to displace S. aureus already bound to Fg, suggesting that the ligand-binding activity of ClfA can be effectively neutralized through vaccination.
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