We performed a retrospective analysis of thirty-three consecutive total
hip and knee (twenty-three hip and ten knee) revision arthroplasties during
which intraoperative frozen sections were analyzed. Data for the study were
collected by means of a review of the charts, radiographic analysis, and
evaluation of both frozen and permanent histological sections. The frozen
sections, of periprosthetic tissue at the bone-cement interface or the
pseudocapsule, were considered positive for active infection if there were
more than five polymorphonuclear leukocytes per high-power field in at
least five distinct microscopic fields. All patients were available for
follow-up, at an average of thirty-six months (range, seventeen to
seventy-nine months) after the initial revision operation. The frozen
sections from ten patients were positive for infection, and those from
twenty-three patients were negative. Comparison of the results of the
analyses of the frozen sections (both positive and negative) with those of
the analyses of the permanent histological sections of similar tissue
showed a correlation of 100 per cent (sensitivity, 1.00; specificity, 1.00;
and accuracy, 1.00). Nine patients had positive intraoperative cultures,
and all of them had positive frozen sections (sensitivity, 1.00). Of the
twenty-four patients who had negative intraoperative cultures, twenty-three
had negative frozen sections (specificity, 0.96). Of the nine patients who
had positive intraoperative cultures, only two were found to have infection
on intraoperative gram-staining. The surgeon's operative assessment
regarding the presence of infection, compared with the final pathological
diagnosis, demonstrated a sensitivity of 0.70, a specificity of 0.87, and
an accuracy of 0.82. All ten patients who had positive frozen sections were
managed with excision arthroplasty; six of them subsequently had
reimplantation, and the excision was the definitive procedure in the
remaining four. One patient who had had a delayed reimplantation had a
secondary skin slough and eventually was managed with an arthrodesis of the
knee. In the group that had negative frozen sections, eighteen patients had
a primary exchange revision arthroplasty and five had a delayed
reimplantation. At the time of follow-up, one patient who had had a delayed
reimplantation had radiographic loosening of the femoral component and was
asymptomatic. One patient who had had a primary exchange arthroplasty was
managed with a second revision because of aseptic loosening. There was no
clinical recurrence of infection in any patient. The data indicate that
analysis of frozen sections of periprosthetic tissue is a reliable
predictor of the presence of active infection during revision joint
arthroplasty. We recommend its use to differentiate aseptic from septic
loosening.