Evaluation of the Efficiency of the Bone Substitute Cerament-G Locally Delivering Gentamicin in the Treatment of Chronic Osteomyelitis of Long Bones

Last updated: July 11, 2024
Sponsor: Hospices Civils de Lyon
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Osteomyelitis

Treatment

Corticotomy

Corticotomy and use of the bone substitute : Cerament-G device.

Clinical Study ID

NCT04805164
69HCL20_0065
2020-A02299-30
  • Ages 18-80
  • All Genders

Study Summary

Chronic osteomyelitis is a serious osteoarticular infection that most often occurs in the long bones (tibia, femur, humerus), responsible for significant morbidity with risk of fracture and amputation. It is due to the presence of bacteria in the bone marrow, sometimes responsible for an intraosseous abscess.

Chronic osteomyelitis can have a hematogenous or more often exogenous origin, after trauma or surgery. The bacteria involved have the ability to modify their metabolism and involve persistence mechanisms (such as biofilm) making them difficult to eradicate. The treatment of chronic osteomyelitis requires surgery, i.e. corticotomy, which means opening of the bone cortex to perform an endomedullary curettage to identify the bacteria, remove any sequestration (bone fragments to which the bacteria adhere as biofilm) and reduce the bacterial inoculum. At the same time, or at a second stage, a skin and soft tissue/muscle flap may be required, especially in patients with long-standing disease with embrittlement and adhesion of the skin and soft tissue to the underlying bone.

Post-operatively, the patient receives a probabilistic systemic antibiotic therapy and then a systemic antibiotic therapy targeted on the identified germ, for a period of 3 months. The effectiveness of these antibiotics is based on their ability to penetrate bone tissue. Despite the progress made in both antibiotics and surgical treatments, the probability of failure (recurrence of infection) is around 20%, and has unfortunately remained stable for more than 20 years.

Cerament-G (BONESUPPORT AB Laboratory, Sweden), a synthetic bone substitute composed of hydroxyapatite, calcium sulphate, and gentamicin, fills the "dead space" formed during surgery, prevents infection of this blood-filled cavity, and promotes bone regeneration within this space (limiting the risk of fracture in the medium and long term). Cerament-G also delivers locally very high doses of gentamicin (concentration of 17.5 mg/mL in the device) for several weeks. Gentamicine is a broad-spectrum bactericidal antibiotic effective against the vast majority of bacteria involved in osteoarticular infections. It provides effective local antibiotic therapy through wide exposure and prolonged concentrations during several weeks.

To date, there is no other bone substitute with antibiotics available in France. Two prospective studies have shown that Cerament-G reduces the number of infectious recurrences (about 5%).

This innovation is available in France but at a high price (between 2,500 and 4,000 euros) and is not currently reimbursed. However, the use of this product would make it possible to improve the health and quality of life of patients while avoiding certain consumption of resources.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patient with suspected chronic osteomyelitis (stage III of the Cierny-Maderclassification) of a long bone of the tibia, femur, humerus or forearm, at thediaphysis, metaphysis or epiphysis, defined as follows:

  • Supposed inoculation > 3 months ;

  • At least one of the following clinical signs at the suspected infected site:

  • Spontaneous or supporting pain ;

  • Presence of fistula; or history of fistula discharge

  • Presence of serous or purulent flow;

  • Presence of bone exposure;

  • Local Inflammation;

  • Fever in the absence of any other explanation.

  • At least one of the following radiological signs at the suspected infectedsite:

  • Bone reshaping with osteolysis or periosteal apposition;

  • Presence of intramedullary abscess (if MRI performed);

  • Presence of a fistulous pathway to the intramedullary (if MRI performed);

  • Presence of bone sequestration visible on CT scan (if CT scan performed).

  • Patient in whom conventional surgical treatment of chronic osteomyelitis ispossible, with decortication and corticotomy with endomedullary curettage (toeradicate bone sequestrums, reduce the inoculum, and identify the bacterium(s)involved) and secondary intramedullary residual cavity;

  • Patient in whom 3 months of systemic antibiotic therapy post-operatively areplanned;

  • If osteosynthetic material is present in the infection site, this material should beconsidered preoperatively as completely removable during chronic osteomyelitissurgery;

  • Patient in whom a direct closure without tension is possible, or in whom a skin andsoft-tissue/muscle flap can be performed within 15 days after the initial surgery;

  • Male or female patient between 18 and 80 years of age;

  • Patient who has given written informed consent to participate in the study;

  • Geographically stable patient;

  • Patient able to comply with follow-up visits, protocol schedule and therapeutictreatment, according to investigator's judgement;

  • Affiliated patient or beneficiary of a social security system

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Acute hematogenic osteomyelitis (Cierny-Mader stage I) ;

  • Cortical osteitis (Cierny-Mader stage II);

  • Septic pseudoarthrosis (Cierny-Mader stage IV);

  • Patient requiring an estimated skin and soft-tissue/muscle flap that cannot be donewithin 15 days after surgery for the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis;

  • Woman who is pregnant, nursing or who is considering becoming pregnant during thestudy period;

  • Patient participating in another interventional study that could interfere with it;

  • Patient known to have hypersensitivity to aminoglycosides (especially gentamicin),sulfites (including calcium sulfate) or calcium hydroxyapatite;

  • Contraindication to the use of Cerament-G: severe myasthenia (class IV or higheraccording to the MGFA classification), , severe renal insufficiency (creatinineclearance <30 mL/min according to the Cockcroft-Gault formula, or GFR < 30ml/min/1.73² according to the CKD-EPI or MDRDs equation or, dialysis patient),pre-existing disorders of calcium metabolism (total plasma calcium (or totalcorrected plasma calcium according to albuminemia) outside normal laboratoryvalues);

  • Patient with endocrine or metabolic disorders known to affect osteogenesis (e.g.,Paget's disease, renal osteodystrophy, hyperthyroidism, parathyroid disorder,Ehler-Danlos syndrome, osteogenesis imperfecta);

  • Patient with one or more untreated malignant cancers (including Marjolin's ulcer),or undergoing radiotherapy or chemotherapy;

  • Adult patient protected by law, under guardianship or trusteeship.

Study Design

Total Participants: 220
Treatment Group(s): 2
Primary Treatment: Corticotomy
Phase:
Study Start date:
October 14, 2021
Estimated Completion Date:
November 14, 2027

Connect with a study center

  • CHU Amiens-Picardie

    Amiens, 80054
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • CHU de Besançon

    Besançon, 25030
    France

    Site Not Available

  • CHU Bordeaux

    Bordeaux, 33076
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • APHP

    Boulogne Billancourt, 92104
    France

    Site Not Available

  • CHU Brest

    Brest, 29200
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • CHU de Caen

    Caen, 14033
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • CHU de Lille

    Lille, 59037
    France

    Site Not Available

  • Hospices Civils de Lyon

    Lyon, 69004
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • CHRU Nancy

    Nancy, 54000
    France

    Site Not Available

  • CHU de Nantes

    Nantes, 44093
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • CHU de Nîmes

    Nîmes, 30029
    France

    Site Not Available

  • Hospices Civils de Lyon

    Pierre-Bénite, 69310
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • CHU de Poitiers

    Poitiers, 86021
    France

    Site Not Available

  • CHU de Toulouse

    Toulouse, 31059
    France

    Active - Recruiting

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