Sznajder Wojciech, Jankowska-Polańska Beata, Tański Wojciech
Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, 4th Military Clinical Hospital, 50-981 Wroclaw, Poland.
Centre for Research and Innovation, 4th Military Clinical Hospital, 50-981 Wroclaw, Poland.
J Clin Med. 2025 Jan 2;14(1):206. doi: 10.3390/jcm14010206.
Fungal periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs) are rare but increasingly recognized complications following total joint arthroplasty (TJA). While remains the most common pathogen, non-albicans species and other fungi, such as , have gained prominence. These infections often present with subtle clinical features and affect patients with significant comorbidities or immunosuppression. Compared to bacterial PJIs, fungal infections pose unique diagnostic and therapeutic challenges, including biofilm formation, limited antifungal susceptibility, and protracted treatment courses. This narrative review synthesizes current evidence from research articles and review/metanalysis papers, focusing on fungal PJIs. The literature search encompassed publications from 2015 to 2024, identifying key insights on epidemiology, risk factors, microbiological profiles, diagnostic methods, therapeutic strategies, and outcomes. Both classical references and recent studies addressing emerging diagnostic biomarkers and biofilm-active therapies were included. It was shown that remains the primary fungal pathogen in PJIs but non-albicans species and other fungi are associated with more complex clinical scenarios, higher recurrence rates, and reduced infection-free survival. Patients commonly exhibit multiple comorbidities, compromised immune status, and previous prosthetic revisions. Diagnosis is complicated by slow-growing organisms and nonspecific inflammatory markers, prompting interest in novel diagnostics such as alpha-defensin, calprotectin, and next-generation sequencing. Two-stage revision arthroplasty, supplemented by prolonged targeted antifungal therapy, is considered the gold standard for chronic infections, although outcomes remain inferior to bacterial PJIs. Emerging strategies, including antifungal-impregnated beads and biofilm-disrupting agents, may improve local infection control. In conclusion, fungal PJIs constitute a challenging clinical entity demanding tailored diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. Further research into standardized diagnostic criteria, optimized antifungal regimens, biomarker validation, and refined surgical strategies is essential. Multidisciplinary collaboration, enhanced patient optimization, and innovative biofilm-directed therapies hold promise for improving outcomes and reducing the burden of fungal PJIs.
真菌性人工关节感染(PJIs)是全关节置换术(TJA)后罕见但日益被认识到的并发症。虽然白色念珠菌仍然是最常见的病原体,但非白色念珠菌属物种和其他真菌,如曲霉菌,已变得越来越突出。这些感染通常表现出细微的临床特征,并影响有严重合并症或免疫抑制的患者。与细菌性PJIs相比,真菌感染带来了独特的诊断和治疗挑战,包括生物膜形成、抗真菌药敏性有限以及治疗疗程漫长。这篇叙述性综述综合了研究文章以及综述/荟萃分析论文中的现有证据,重点关注真菌性PJIs。文献检索涵盖了2015年至2024年的出版物,确定了关于流行病学、危险因素、微生物学特征、诊断方法、治疗策略和结果的关键见解。纳入了经典参考文献以及涉及新兴诊断生物标志物和生物膜活性疗法的近期研究。结果表明,白色念珠菌仍然是PJIs中的主要真菌病原体,但非白色念珠菌属物种和其他真菌与更复杂的临床情况、更高的复发率以及无感染生存期缩短有关。患者通常表现出多种合并症、免疫状态受损以及既往有假体翻修史。生长缓慢的微生物和非特异性炎症标志物使诊断变得复杂,这引发了人们对新型诊断方法的兴趣,如α-防御素、钙卫蛋白和下一代测序。两阶段翻修关节成形术,辅以延长的靶向抗真菌治疗,被认为是慢性感染的金标准,尽管其结果仍不如细菌性PJIs。包括抗真菌浸渍珠和生物膜破坏剂在内的新兴策略可能会改善局部感染控制。总之,真菌性PJIs构成了一个具有挑战性的临床实体,需要量身定制的诊断和治疗方法。对标准化诊断标准、优化抗真菌方案、生物标志物验证和精细手术策略的进一步研究至关重要。多学科协作、加强患者优化以及创新的生物膜导向疗法有望改善结果并减轻真菌性PJIs的负担。