Septic arthritis in males with haemophilia

Abstract

We used data collected as part of the Universal Data Collection (UDC) surveillance project in haemophilia treatment centers (HTC) to study the incidence, risk factors, and impact of septic arthritis among males with haemophilia. Patients participating in UDC on 2 or more occasions were included. Cases were defined as patients with documented joint infection. Characteristics of the cases were compared with those of haemophilia patients without infection. Among the 8026 eligible patients with 36,015 person-years of follow-up, 30 (0.37%) had a documented joint infection (incidence rate 83 per 100,000 person-years). In a logistic regression model, only increasing age (OR = 6.1 for age β‰₯30), race/ethnicity other than white (OR = 3.9), presence of inhibitor (OR = 3.9), invasive procedure in the past year (OR = 2.7) and presence of one or more target joints (OR = 3.2) remained statistically significant. CVAD use and HCV and HIV infection were not associated with septic arthritis risk after adjusting for potential confounders. Study limitations include possible underestimation of septic arthritis rate in this population and its retrospective design. We conclude that septic arthritis is an uncommon complication of haemophilia occurring primarily in joints most affected by bleeding and reparative surgical interventions

    Similar works