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Alpha-Defensin and Synovial Proteins to Improve Detection of Pediatric Septic Arthritis

RECRUITINGN/ASponsored by Hospital for Special Surgery, New York
Actively Recruiting
PhaseN/A
SponsorHospital for Special Surgery, New York
Started2016-06-28
Est. completion2026-05
Eligibility
Healthy vol.Accepted
Locations3 sites

Summary

Differentiating between septic arthritis and other causes of joint inflammation in pediatric patients is challenging and of the utmost importance because septic arthritis requires surgical debridement as part of the treatment regimen. The current gold standard to diagnose septic arthritis in children is a positive synovial fluid culture; however, joint cultures may take several days to return. If a bacterial infection is present, it requires immediate surgical intervention in order to prevent lasting articular cartilage damage. Frequently surgeons must decide whether to surgically debride a joint before culture results are available. There is no single lab test or clinical feature that reliably indicates bacterial infection over other causes of joint inflammation. The alpha-defensin assay has shown high sensitivity and specificity for joint infection in other studies.The purpose of this study is to determine the sensitivity and specificity of several synovial biomarkers for diagnosing pediatric septic arthritis.

Eligibility

Healthy volunteers accepted
Inclusion Criteria- Septic Cases and Inflamed, Non-Septic Comparators:

* Synovial fluid is obtained to assess for infection or inflammatory/rheumatologic disease (all medium and large joints will be included: hip, knee, ankle, shoulder, subtalar, elbow, and wrist joints)
* Patients with recent antibiotic exposure are eligible to participate but will be analyzed separately

Inclusion Criteria- Normative Controls:

* Patients undergoing a procedure unrelated to infection (the procedure may be arthroscopy, or an open or percutaneous bony or soft tissue procedure)

Exclusion Criteria- All Participants:

* Family declines to participate/consent
* Patients with a major joint trauma (such as a documented ligament tear or fracture) within the past 8 weeks are not eligible to have that joint aspirated, but could have another joint aspirated

Exclusion Criteria- Normative Controls:

* A history of recent infection (within the past 3 months)
* Received antibiotics in the past 7 days

Conditions5

ArthritisInfection of Hip Joint (Disorder)Infection of Shoulder JointJoint InfectionSeptic Arthritis

Locations3 sites

Georgia

1 site
Children's Healthcare of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia, 30342
Jack Goldberg, MS(678) 686-6864Jack.Goldberg@choa.org

New York

1 site
Hospital for Special Surgery
New York, New York, 10021
Grace Wang, BA212-774-2121wangg@hss.edu

Tennessee

1 site
Campbell Clinic
Collierville, Tennessee, 38017
Jonathan Rowland(901) 287-5413Jonathan.Rowland@lebonheur.org

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