Aortic graft infection

From IDWiki

Diagnosis

MAGIC Case Definition
Category Major Criteria Minor Criteria
Clinical
  • Pus confirmed by microscopy around graft of in aneurysm sac at surgery
  • Open wound with exposed graft or communicating sinus
  • Fistua development e.g. aortoenteric or aortobronchial
  • Graft insertion in an infected site, e.g. fistula, mycotic aneursym, or infected pseudoaneurysm
  • Localized clinical features of AGI e.g. erythema, warmth, swelling, purulent discharge, pain
  • Fever ≥38 degrees Celsius with AGI as most likely cause
Radiology
  • Peri-graft fluid on CT scan ≥3 months after insertion
  • Peri-graft gas on CT scan ≥7 weeks after insertion
  • Increase in peri-graft gas volume demonstrated on serial imaging
  • Other e.g. suspicious per-graft gas/fluid/soft tissue inflammation; aneurysm expansion; pseudoaneurysm formation; focal bowel wall thickening; discitis/osteomyelitis; suspicious metabolic activity on FDG PET/CT; radiolabelled leukocyte uptake
Laboratory
  • Organisms recovered from an explanted graft
  • Organisms recovered from an intraoperative specimen
  • Organisms recovered from a percutaneous, radiologically-guided aspirate of peri-graft fluid
  • Blood culture(s) positive and no apparent source except AGI
  • Abnormally elevated inflammatory markers with AGI as most likely cause e.g. ESR, CRP, white cell count

Interpretation

  • Suspected AGI:
    • Any isolated major criterion, or
    • Minor criteria from two of the three categories
  • Diagnosed AGI:
    • A single major criterion, plus any other criterion from another category
  • Note that, for bacteria that may be contaminants, they must be isolated from at least two samples (any combination of blood cultures and intraoperative samples)

Further Reading

  • Diagnosis of Aortic Graft Infection: A Case Definition by the Management of Aortic Graft Infection Collaboration (MAGIC). Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg. 2016;52:758-763. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejvs.2016.09.007