“Chemotherapy suppresses the immune system, rendering patients more vulnerable to infections,” researchers wrote in the study.
Researchers studied data from 17,026 patients in the U.S. who received postoperative chemotherapy within 1 year of total knee (n = 8,558), hip (n = 6,707) or shoulder (n = 1,761) arthroplasty between 2010 and 2022. They also analyzed data from matched cohorts of patients who underwent the same procedures without postoperative chemotherapy.
Researchers found patients who received postoperative chemotherapy had significantly increased rates of PJI at multiple postoperative follow-up timepoints compared with control patients.
Patients who underwent TKA and postoperative chemotherapy had significantly higher rates of PJI at 2 years (OR = 1.59), 3 years (OR = 1.57) and 4 years (OR = 1.40) compared with patients who did not receive postoperative chemotherapy. Patients who had THA and postoperative chemotherapy had significantly higher rates of PJI at 2 years (OR = 2.27), 3 years (OR = 2.32) and 4 years (OR = 2.25) vs. control patients. Additionally, patients who underwent TSA and postoperative chemotherapy had significantly higher rates of PJI at 4 years (OR = 2.20) compared with control patients.
Researchers found no significant differences in rates of all-cause revision between patients who received chemotherapy and control patients.
“[Postoperative] interprofessional follow-up in short-term intervals aimed at early detection and referral can potentially mitigate the risk of PJI and other comorbidity in patients with chemotherapy-related immunosuppression,” the researchers wrote.