SOE – Cleansers
(Back to text)
- The 2016 IWGDF Guidelines for DFU recommends that ulcers be cleaned regularly with water or saline (Strong C) [19]
- The 2016 Wound Healing Society guideline for DFU recommends that wounds be cleansed initially and at each dressing change using a neutral, non-irritating, non-toxic solution, such as sterile saline or water. Tap water should be used if water is potable. Routine wound cleansing should be accomplished with a minimum of chemical and/or mechanical trauma (evidence level C) Authors also mention that experimental data suggest that a nontoxic surfactant may be useful as may fluid delivered by increased intermittent pressure. [27]
- A Cochrane 2012 systematic review included 1 RCT that analyzed risk of infection in chronic wounds cleansed with water or saline and concluded that for chronic wounds, there is no difference in the risk of developing an infection when cleansed with tap water or normal saline. The body of evidence can be considered of low quality of evidence due to small sample size of the RCT and absence of other trials (evidence level C). Authors also stated that in the absence of potable tap water, boiled and cooled water as well as distilled water can be used as wound cleansing agents [82]
|
SOE - Debridement
(Back to text)
- The 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) systematic review and meta-analysis on debridement for DFU included 13 studies (788 patients). The risk of bias in the included studies was moderate. Meta-analysis of three RCTs showed that autolytic débridement significantly increased healing rate compared with standard wound débridement (RR, 1.89; 95% CI, 1.35-2.64). Meta-analysis of 4 comparative studies (one RCT) showed that larval débridement reduced amputation (RR, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.21-0.88) but did not aid complete healing (RR, 1.27; 95% CI, 0.84-1.91). No significant difference in wound healing was found between autolytic débridement and larval débridement (one RCT). Surgical débridement had shorter healing time compared with conventional wound care (one RCT). Ultrasound débridement was associated with reduction in wound size compared with surgical débridement. Hydrosurgical débridement had similar wound healing outcomes to standard surgical débridement.In general, comparative effectiveness evidence was of low quality, and the débridement method is recommended to be at the clinician’s discretion, with the goal of wound size reduction to full healing. The chosen débridement method should encourage patient compliance with the overall care plan.[17][84]
- The latest Cochrane systematic review that evaluated whether debridement for DFU promotes wound healing was published in 2010 and included 6 RCTs. Authors acknowledged that debridement is recommended by most guidelines, however quality of evidence to support debridement to promote wound healing is low. All RCTs are at high risk of bias. The evidence suggests that hydrogels are significantly more effective in healing diabetic foot ulcers compared to gauze (Relative Risk 1.84, 95% Confidence Interval (CI)1.3 to 2.61). Surgical debridement showed no significant benefit over standard treatment. One small trial, available in abstract form only, suggested that larvae resulted in a greater reduction in wound area compared with hydrogel, but this evidence has not been confirmed by publication of full trial results [83]
- The 2016 International Wound Group for Diabetic Foot (IWGDF), the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS), the 2012 Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) and the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) guidelines support debridement of VLU to promote wound healing, although the levels of evidence assigned by these societies differed from each other, possibly due to different evidence grading methodologies and different studies from which evidence was drawn (see table below) [17] [20] [27] [87] :
Intervention for DFU
|
IWGDF
|
IDSA
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
DFU debridement at initial evaluation vs. no debridement
|
Strong C
|
Strong B
|
Strong B
|
Level I
|
Additional maintenance debridement of DFU
|
Strong C
|
Debridement should be repeated as often as needed if nonviable tissue continues to form
|
Strong B (1-4 week intervals)
|
Level I
|
Sharp debridement
|
Strong C
|
Strong C
|
Strong B
|
Level I
|
Autolytic
|
Hydrogels may have some benefit in terms of wound healing when compared with saline moistened gauze, but the risk of bias in the published studies was high
|
Weak C
|
2CSVS suggests initial sharp débridement with subsequent choice of débridement method based on clinical context, availability of expertise and supplies, patient tolerance and preference, and cost-effectiveness (Grade Weak C).
|
The method of debridement chosen may depend on the status of the wound, the capability of the health provider, the overall condition of the patient, and professional licensing restrictions.
|
Hydrosurgical debridement
|
Low evidence
|
n/a
|
Ultrasonic debridement
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Enzymatic Debridement
|
Low evidence
|
n/a
|
Biological debridement
|
Low evidence
|
Weak C
|
Mechanical debridement
|
n/a
|
Weak C
|
- We reviewed the Cochrane and SVS systematic reviews and the studies that the guidelines above used to grade quality of evidence and strength of recommendation (when applicable) for each of intervention above. Applying the GRADE framework to the combined body of evidence, we found that:
-
- Evidence that support the recommendation to perform debridement at initial evaluation and for maintenance to promote DFU healing compared to no debridement was of low quality (evidence level C), provided mainly by observational studies or RCTs at high risk of bias.
- Current studies do not provide sufficient evidence to conclude with confidence which method of debridement confers most benefit in the healing of DFU. Studies that concluded that one method was superior than other had important methodological limitations (level C).
|
SOE - Exudate and moisture management
(back to text)
- The 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS), the 2012 Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) and the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) guidelines support managing DFU exudate, protecting periwound skin and maintaining a moist wound bed, although the levels of evidence assigned by these societies differed from each other, possibly due to different evidence grading methodologies and different studies from which evidence was drawn
Intervention for VLU
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
IDSA
|
Manage DFU exudate and protect periwound skin
|
Strong B
|
Level I
|
Strong C
|
Maintain a moist wound bed
|
Strong B
|
Level III
|
Strong C
|
- We reviewed the studies that the three guidelines used to grade quality of evidence and strength of recommendation for each of intervention above and found that:
- The recommendation to manage DFU exudate and protect periwound skin is supported by low quality evidence (evidence level C), provided mainly by laboratory experimental studies that demonstrated that exudate may impede the healing of chronic wounds [100] or detected higher quantities of MMP in exudate of chronic wounds, compared to that of acute wounds. [101] [102] Conclusions of other studies cited by guidelines were not directly relevant in supporting this intervention, as they primarily compared effectiveness of different dressings in DFU healing, and did not necessarily evaluate effect of DFU exudate and MMP in wound healing and peri-wound skin integrity.
- The recommendation to maintain a moist wound bed is supported by low quality evidence (evidence level C), provided mainly by laboratory experimental studies that demonstrated that moist environments promote faster wound healing. [103] [104] Conclusions of other studies cited by guidelines were not directly relevant in supporting this intervention, as they did not necessarily evaluate effect of moist vs. non-moist environment in wound healing.
|
SOE - Wound dressings - type of wound dressings
(back to text)
- A 2015 Cochrane overview of systematic reviews [111] included 13 reviews that evaluated dressings to promote healing of DFUs and concluded that there is currently no robust evidence of differences between wound dressings for any outcome in foot ulcers in people with diabetes (treated in any setting). Main comparisons described by the reviews and the level of evidence of each of them are depicted below:
Intervention
|
Comparator
|
Evidence level
|
No clear evidence of difference between the following dressings in DFU healing
|
Basic wound contact
|
alginate
|
Moderate (B)
|
Basic wound contact
|
hydrofiber
|
Moderate (B)
|
Basic wound contact
|
iodine-impregnated
|
Moderate (B)
|
Basic wound contact
|
Protease-modulating matrix
|
Moderate (B)
|
Foam
|
Matrix-hydrocolloid
|
Low (C)
|
Iodine-impregnated
|
Hydrofiber
|
Moderate (B)
|
Alginate
|
Silver-hydrofiber
|
Moderate (B)
|
Evidence of a difference in wound healing between dressings was reported for the following (favored intervention in bold):
|
Basic wound contact
|
Hydrogel
|
Low (C)
|
Basic wound contact
|
Foam
|
Very Low
|
Foam
|
Alginate
|
Very Low
|
- Alginate: Low-quality evidence (Evidence level C due to high risk of bias) suggests that alginate wound dressings are equally effective in healing DFU than other types of dressing, however many trials in this field are very small and underpowered to detect any statistically significant difference
-
- A 2013 Cochrane systematic review evaluated 6 RCTs (375 participants) found no evidence that alginate is more effective in promoting DFU healing compared to other dressings. These RCTs compared alginate dressings with basic wound contact dressings, foam dressings and a silver-containing, fibrous-hydrocolloid dressing. Meta analysis of two studies found no statistically significant difference between alginate dressings and basic wound contact dressings: risk ratio (RR) 1.09 (95% CI 0.66 to 1.80). Pooled data from two studies comparing alginate dressings with foam dressings found no statistically significant difference in ulcer healing (RR 0.67, 95% CI 0.41 to 1.08). There was no statistically significant difference in the number of diabetic foot ulcers healed when an antimicrobial (silver) hydrocolloid dressing was compared with a standard alginate dressing (RR 1.40, 95% CI 0.79 to 2.47). All studies had short follow-up time (six to 12 weeks), and small sample sizes (Evidence level C). [105]
- A 2017 RCT (31 participants) concluded that DFUs treated with Acticoat (nAg alginate) healed faster than DFU treated with manuka honey or with conventional dressing (tulle) in 12 weeks. [188] The study was small and underpowered to detect statistically significant difference and had a surrogate endpoint at 12 weeks (evidence level C). Acticoat (HCPCS A9270) is considered a non-covered item by Medicare
- Hydrogel: Low-quality evidence (Evidence level C due to impreciseness, different baselines at the start of study and unclear risk of bias) suggests that hydrogel dressings are more effective in healing DFU when compared with basic wound contact dressings. We reviewed the systematic reviews below and agree with the classification given by the 2013 and 2015 Cochrane reviews (evidence level C).
-
- The latest 2013 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis on hydrogel dressings and DFU included 5 RCTs (446 participants) comparing effectiveness of hydrogel dressings and other interventions in DFU healing. [106] Meta analysis of 3 of the 5 RCTs (198 participants) comparing hydrogel dressings with basic wound contract dressings found significantly greater healing with hydrogel (RR 1.80, 95% confidence interval, 1.27 to 2.56). Authors concluded that there is some evidence to suggest that hydrogel dressings are more effective in healing lower grade diabetic foot ulcers than basic wound contact dressings however this finding is uncertain due to risk of bias in the original studies (note of editor: the review did not specify level of evidence, but editors assume a level C, based on small size, unclear risk of bias and different baselines at the start of the studies). Authors also highlighted that at the time of publication was no research evidence to suggest that hydrogel is more effective than larval therapy or platelet-derived growth factors in healing diabetic foot ulcers, nor that one brand of hydrogel is more effective than another in ulcer healing.
- The 2015 Cochrane review [111] of systematic reviews analyzed 3 systematic reviews that compared hydrofiber and basic wound dressings [83] [106] [108]. These 3 reviews performed meta-analyses of the same studies. All reviews found evidence of an increase in the number of wounds healed in the hydrogel-treated group, however the direct estimate was classed as being of low quality (evidence level C) by Dumville et al [108]
- A 2016 meta-analysis [107] of the same 3 RCTs (198 participants) analyzed by the 2013 Cochrane meta-analysis [106] comparing hydrogel dressing and basic wound contact dressing found moderate level evidence that hydrogel dressings are more effective in promoting DFU healing compared to basic wound contact dressings (RR 1.80, 95% confidence interval, 1.27 - 2.56]). Authors gave a 2A recommendation in favor of using hydrofiber over basic wound contact dressings to promote DFU healing
- Foam: Low-quality evidence (Evidence level C, due to high risk of bias - studies are small, have limited follow up times, and/ or are sponsored by manufacturers) suggests that foam dressings when compared to basic wound contact dressings, alginate or hydrocolloid (matrix) dressings are equally effective and present no difference in adverse effects in healing DFUs.
- A 2013 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis on foam dressings and DFU included 6 RCTs (157 participants) comparing effectiveness of foam dressings with other interventions in DFU healing. [109] Meta analysis of 2 RCTs (49 participants) indicated that foam dressings do not promote the healing of DFUs compared with basic wound contact dressings (RR 2.03, 95%CI 0.91 to 4.55). Pooled data from 2 RCTs (50 participants) comparing foam and alginate dressing found no statistically significant difference in ulcer healing (RR 1.50, 95% CI 0.92 to 2.44). There was no statistically significant difference in the number of DFUs healed when foam dressings were compared with hydrocolloid (matrix) dressings in 1 RCT (40 participants). All included studies were small and/or had limited follow-up times. Authors concluded that currently there is no research evidence to suggest that foam wound dressings are more effective in healing DFUs than other types of dressing however all trials in this field are very small (evidence level C)
- The 2015 Cochrane review [111] of systematic reviews analyzed 5 systematic reviews that compared foam and alginate dressings [105] [108] [109] [189] [190]. Four of these 5 reviews analyzed the same 2 RCTs. Overall data across these 4 systematic reviews reported no clear evidence of a difference between these dressings, although an estimate based on indirect as well as direct evidence found that more wounds healed with foam dressings than with alginate dressings. [108] Estimates were very uncertain and imprecise (evidence level C)
- A 2016 meta-analysis [107] evaluated 2 RCTs (50 participants) comparing the effectiveness of alginate and foam dressings in DFUs healing and concluded that there was no difference between the treatment groups (RR 0.67, 95% confidence interval, 0.41-1.08). The same meta-analysis evaluated 3RCTs (99 participants) that compared foam and basic wound contact dressings and also found no difference in DFUs healing between the two interventions (RR 1.45, 95% confidence interval, 1.00-2.09). Authors graded the evidence as level B (evidence level B).
- A 2016 observational study [191] included 208 participants and compared effectiveness of highly hydrophilic polyurethane foam dressing with basic wound contact dressing in promoting DFU healing. Complete wound healing occurred in 87 patients (63.5%) in the polyurethane foam dressing group and in 28 patients (39.4%) in the control group within 12 weeks ( P G .05, X 2 test). The mean percentage of wound area reduction in both groups was statistically significant ( P G .05, Mann-Whitney U test). The mean time required for complete closure in patients who achieved complete healing within 12 weeks was 6.2 (SD, 3.4) weeks and 7.3 (SD, 2.6) weeks in the polyurethane foam dressing and control groups, respectively ( P G .05, Mann-Whitney U test). Authors concluded that highly hydrophilic polyurethane foam dressings may be an effective intervention in the treatment of DFU.
- A 2017 case series [192] included 53 patients with DFU, VLU and PI treated with regular debridement with the use of ovine-based collagen extracellular matrix dressings and gentian violet/methylene blue polyurethane antibacterial foam dressings. Average time to closure for all wounds was 10.6 weeks (range, 5-24 weeks). All wounds were 100% reepithelialized by week 20 except 1 DFU that reepithelialized at week 24. The average cost of care for a single wound episode (from presentation to closure) was $2749.49. The effects of a foam dressing was not studied separately and sample size for DFU was small. (Evidence level C)
- Hydrocolloid: Evidence suggests that hydrocolloid dressings have no statistically significant difference in DFUs healing when compared with basic wound contact dressings (evidence level B), foam dressings, alginate dressings and a topical treatment
- A 2013 Cochrane systematic review [110] evaluated 5 RCTs (535 participants) that compared hydrocolloids with basic wound contact dressings, foam dressings, alginate dressings and a topical treatment. Meta-analysis of 2 studies [91] [193] indicated no statistically significant difference in ulcer healing between fibrous-hydrocolloids and basic wound contact dressings [Risk ratio 1.01 (95% CI 0.74 to 1.38)] (Evidence level B). One of these 2 studies [91] found that a basic wound contact dressing (a non-adherent, knitted, viscose filament gauze) was more cost-effective than a fibrous-hydrocolloid dressing (Aquacel) in promoting DFU healing in the UK, as in that study, higher cost of Aquacel was not offset by the fewer dressings required. One study compared a hydrocolloid-matrix dressing (Cutinova Hydro, S&N Hlth) with a foam dressing (Allevyn, S&N Hlth) and found no statistically significant difference in the number of ulcers healed. There was no statistically significant difference in healing between an antimicrobial (silver) fibrous-hydrocolloid dressing (Aquacel Ag, ConvaTec) and standard alginate dressing [194]; an antimicrobial dressing (iodine-impregnated) and a standard fibrous hydrocolloid dressing or a standard fibrous hydrocolloid dressing and a topical cream containing plant extracts [195]. Authors concluded that currently there is no research evidence to suggest that any type of hydrocolloid wound dressing is more effective in healing DFUs than other types of dressing or a topical cream containing plant extracts.
- A 2016 systematic review and meta-analysis [107] analyzed the same studies the 2013 Cochrane review evaluated and concluded that there was no difference in effectiveness of hydrocolloids compared with basic wound contact dressings in promoting DFU healing [RR 1.1, confidence interval of 95%, (0.85, 1.44)]
- Collagen:
-
- A 2012 manufacturer sponsored study that utilized disease modeling data (as opposed to real RCT data) concluded that Promogran may be more cost-effective than good wound care with non-adherent gauze in healing DFUs in four European countries (France, Germany, Switzerland and UK). [113] Assumptions used in disease modeling are frequently derived from expert opinion (Evidence level C)
- Antimicrobial dressings: Low-certainty evidence (evidence level C) suggests that more DFUs - infected or not infected - may heal when treated with an antimicrobial dressing than with a non-antimicrobial dressing.
-
- A 2017 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [60] included 5 RCTs (945 participants) that compared effectiveness of antimicrobial dressings and non-antimicrobial dressings in DFUs healing, and found that more wounds may heal when treated with an antimicrobial dressing than with a non-antimicrobial dressing [RR: 1.28, 95% confidence interval (1.12 to 1.45)]. Authors considered this finding as low-certainty evidence (evidence level C) due to risk of bias. It was uncertain whether antimicrobial dressings can aid in infection healing or prevent infection in DFUs (low-certainty evidence, level C). Where reported, the grade of ulcer in the studies ranged from I to III. Some studies enrolled patients with ulcers with duration longer than 30 days, others did not specify duration of the ulcer at enrollment. Three studies evaluated silver-containing dressings ( Gottrup 2013 ; He 2016 ; Jude 2007 ), one a honey-containing dressing ( Imran 2015 ), and one an iodine-containing dressing ( Jeffcoate 2009 ). Wounds were not infected at baseline in one study ( Gottrup 2013 ); mixed infected and not infected in one study ( Jude 2007 ); and not reported in the remaining three studies. Authors concluded that antimicrobial dressings probably increase the number of healing events in the medium term compared with non-antimicrobial dressings (evidence level C). However, the effect antimicrobial dressings on the incidence of infection, other outcomes, and adverse events is unclear (evidence level C)
- As for cost-effectiveness, one small, manufacturer sponsored RCT (41 participants) [112] compared treatment with a cadexomer iodine ointment to “standard treatment”, which included a gentamicin solution, in people with a grade I or II ulcer and followed them for 12 weeks. Cadexomer iodine was shown to be dominant compared to standard treatment. [196] However, according to the 2017 Cochrane review, it is uncertain whether there was a difference in the risk ratio of healing between these treatments: RR 2.16, 95% CI 0.47 to 9.88 (very low-certainty evidence - downgraded twice for imprecision and once for risk of bias)
|
SOE - Antimicrobial Topical Agents
(Back to text)
Antimicrobial dressings: Low-certainty evidence (evidence level C) suggests that more DFUs - infected or not infected - may heal when treated with an antimicrobial dressing than with a non-antimicrobial dressing.
The 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) [20] and the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17] guidelines do not advocate for use of antimicrobial dressings for most uninfected DFU. The 2012 Wound and Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] recommends instituting a short course of antimicrobial agent along with careful daily monitoring of the DFU for signs of infection
Intervention
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
IDSA
|
WOCN
|
Use antimicrobial dressings to treat DFU
|
“There is minimal evidence for increased rate of healing with other popular wound dressings, including honey and topical silver”
|
“Selectively use adjuvant agents (topical, device, and/or systemic) after evaluating a patient and their ulcer characteristics and when there is a lack of healing progress in response to more traditional therapies”
|
“We do not advocate using topical antimicrobials for most clinically uninfected wounds”
|
“Institute a short course of a topical antimicrobial agent along with careful daily monitoring of the neuropathic ulcer for signs of infection. Level of Evidence = B”
|
- A 2006 Cochrane review of treatment with silver-based wound dressings or topical agents for DFU [197] found no RCTs reporting outcomes on healing rates or infection resolution, and thus could not draw any conclusion related to their effectiveness on healing DFU
- A 2015 Cochrane systematic review on topical honey for treating wounds [198] concluded that it may reduce healing time for mild-to-moderate superficial and partial-thickness burns and infected postoperative wounds, but did not significantly hasten leg ulcer healing
- A 2016 systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions in the management of diabetic foot infections [199] found six studies that investigated the use of topical agents, but the methods and results did not allow the authors to draw any definitive conclusions. [60]
- A 2017 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [60] included 5 RCTs (945 participants) that compared effectiveness of antimicrobial dressings and non-antimicrobial dressings in DFUs healing, and found that more wounds may heal when treated with an antimicrobial dressing than with a non-antimicrobial dressing [RR: 1.28, 95% confidence interval (1.12 to 1.45)]. Authors considered this finding as low-certainty evidence (evidence level C) due to risk of bias. It was uncertain whether antimicrobial dressings can aid in infection healing or prevent infection in DFUs (low-certainty evidence, level C). Where reported, the grade of ulcer in the studies ranged from I to III. Some studies enrolled patients with ulcers with duration longer than 30 days, others did not specify duration of the ulcer at enrollment. Three studies evaluated silver-containing dressings ( Gottrup 2013 ; He 2016 ; Jude 2007 ), one a honey-containing dressing ( Imran 2015 ), and one an iodine-containing dressing ( Jeffcoate 2009 ). Wounds were not infected at baseline in one study ( Gottrup 2013 ); mixed infected and not infected in one study ( Jude 2007 ); and not reported in the remaining three studies. Authors concluded that antimicrobial dressings probably increase the number of healing events in the medium term compared with non-antimicrobial dressings (evidence level C). However, the effect antimicrobial dressings on the incidence of infection, other outcomes, and adverse events is unclear (evidence level C). Given the weak available evidence, authors could not draw a firm conclusion on the role of any topical antimicrobial in the treatment or prevention of wound infection in people with foot ulcers and diabetes.
- As for cost-effectiveness, one small, manufacturer sponsored RCT (41 participants) published in 1996 [112] compared treatment with a cadexomer iodine ointment to “standard treatment”, which included a gentamicin solution, in people with a grade I or II ulcer and followed them for 12 weeks. Cadexomer iodine was shown to be dominant compared to standard treatment. [196] However, according to the 2017 Cochrane review, it is uncertain whether there was a difference in the risk ratio of healing between these treatments: RR 2.16, 95% CI 0.47 to 9.88 (very low-certainty evidence - downgraded twice for imprecision and once for risk of bias)
|
SOE - Xerosis
(back to text)
- A 2002 RCT (40 participants) compared the efficacy of a test moisturizer containing 10% urea and 4% lactic acid with its emulsion base vehicle in the treatment of xerosis of the feet in patients with diabetes. Feet treated with the vehicle cream (control) had an initial mean xerosis grading of 6.17 (+/- 0.79) and a final xerosis grading of 4.38 (+/- 2.20). In the treatment group, mean xerosis grading diminished from 6.13 (+/- 0.73) to 3.19 (+/- 2.23) after 4 weeks (P < 0.01). Authors concluded that regular use of a moisturizer was found to be beneficial in the treatment of moderate-to-severe xerosis of the feet in patients with diabetes (evidence level C, due to small size and surrogate endpoint). [96]
- A 2011 RCT (54 participants) [95] compared the efficacy of Pédimed(®) cream and its placebo in the treatment of foot xerosis in diabetic patients. A decrease in XAS score that was more marked with Pédimed(®) than with placebo was observed from D14 (38.1% vs 20.9%, P<0.0001), reaching 61.9% vs 34.9% at D28 (P<0.0001). However, study is industry sponsored and at moderate level of bias due to surrogate endpoint (evidence level B)
- A 2017 RCT (57 participants) [97] compared an emollient (Dexeryl®) to its placebo in treating xerosis of DFU. Compared with the vehicle, the emollient also significantly improved the overall skin score, hydration index, D-Squame® (CuDerm Corporation, Dallas, TX, USA) test, skin roughness and patients' opinions.Treatment with an emollient is effective for improving foot xerosis in patients with diabetes. Study had surrogate endpoint of 28 days, and was industry-sponsored (evidence level B)
- A 2017 systematic review included 22 studies that evaluated use of emollients to treat xerosis in patients with DFU. Studies analyzed 12 different active ingredients, and urea was the most researched active ingredient (14 studies), with ammonium lactate being next (7 studies). Authors could not reach a conclusion related to which active ingredient was best, due to high risk of bias (evidence level C). [98]
|
SOE - Systemic Antibiotics
(back to text)
The 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) [20] and the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17] guidelines recommend implementing definite antibiotic therapy
based on results of appropriately collected culture and sensitivity testing as well as the patient’s clinical response to the empiric regimen.
Intervention
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
IDSA
|
Use empiric antibiotic regimen on the basis of the severity of the infection and the likely etiologic agents
|
Supports IDSA
|
n/a
|
Strong, low
|
Definitive therapy be based on the results of an appropriately obtained culture and sensitivity testing of a wound specimen as well as the patient’s clinical response to the empiric regimen
|
Supports IDSA
|
Level II
|
Strong, low
|
- A 2015 Cochrane systematic review that included 20 RCTs (3791 participants) concluded that evidence for the relative effects of different empiric systemic antibiotics for the treatment of foot infections in diabetes is very heterogeneous and generally at unclear or high risk of bias (evidence level C) due to limitations in the design of the RCTs. Therefore, it is not clear if any specific empiric systemic antibiotic treatment is better than others in resolving infection or in terms of safety. One RCT suggested that ertapenem with or without vancomycin is more effective in achieving clinical resolution of infection than tigecycline. [64]
- Low-certainty evidence (evidence level C) suggests that there is no specific systemic antibiotic treatment that is better than others in resolving infection or in terms of safety.[200]
|
SOE - Offloading
(back to text)
Moderate to high certainty evidence (evidence level B) supported by several RCTs suggest that offloading promotes faster DFU healing compared with no offloading.
- A 2013 Cochrane systematic review [44] analyzed 2 RCTs (98 participants) that compared non-removable pressure relieving device with no pressure relief in DFU healing. Both trials reported that significantly more ulcers healed in the TCC (non-removable) group. Overall, studies were at moderate risk of bias.
- The 2023 and 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [37][38], the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines recommend offloading to promote DFU healing, although the levels of evidence assigned by these societies differed from each other, possibly due to different evidence grading methodologies and different studies from which evidence was drawn.
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
Offloading of high pressure areas to heal DFUs
|
Yes - but does not specify recommendation strength or evidence level
|
Yes - but does not specify recommendation strength or evidence level
|
Level I
|
Yes - but does not specify recommendation strength or evidence level
|
|
SOE - Non-removable knee-high offloading device
(back to text)
Moderate level evidence support the use of non-removable knee-high offloading devices instead of other modalities to promote healing of nonischemic, non-infected forefoot DFUs (Evidence level B)
- A 2017 Canadian health technology assessment with systematic review [36] included 13 RCTs and found that the evidence suggests that total contact casting, removable cast walkers, and irremovable cast walkers are beneficial in the treatment of neuropathic, non infected foot ulcers in patients with diabetes but without severe peripheral arterial disease.
-
- Compared to removable cast walkers, ulcer healing was improved with total contact casting (moderate quality evidence; risk difference 0.17 [95% confidence interval 0.00-0.33]) and irremovable cast walkers (low quality evidence; risk difference 0.21 [95% confidence interval 0.01-0.40]).
- There was no difference in ulcer healing between total contact casting and irremovable cast walkers (low quality evidence; risk difference 0.02 [95% confidence interval -0.11-0.14]).
- The economic analysis showed that total contact casting and irremovable cast walkers were less expensive and led to more health outcome gains (e.g., ulcers healed and quality-adjusted life-years) than removable cast walkers. Irremovable cast walkers were as effective as total contact casting and were associated with lower costs.
- A 2016 IWGDF systematic review [43] included 2 systematic reviews and meta-analyses, 32 RCTs, 15 other controlled studies, and another 127 non controlled studies. Authors found that:
-
- For healing of forefoot DFU, 2 meta-analyses [40] [44] showed that non-removable offloading are more effective than removable offloading. (considered by IWGDF high quality evidence, but studies used by the meta-analyses were of moderate quality evidence)
- On the basis of one RCT and mostly non-controlled studies, cast shoes, forefoot offloading shoes, and custom-made temporary shoes appear to promote healing of neuropathic plantar ulcers.
- Due to the limited number of controlled studies, clear evidence on the efficacy of surgical offloading and felted foam is not yet available. Interestingly, surgical offloading seems more effective in preventing than in healing ulcers. A number of controlled and uncontrolled studies show that plantar pressure can be reduced by several conservative and surgical approaches.
- The evidence base to support the use of other offloading interventions in DFU healing is still limited and of variable quality.
- A 2016 SVS-commissioned systematic review [46] analyzed 19 studies, (1605 patients), of which 13 were RCTS that compared TCC with other offloading modalities to promote DFU healing.The risk of bias in the included studies was moderate. This analysis demonstrated faster wound healing with total contact casting over removable cast walker (weighted mean difference,12.36 days; 95% CI, 22.63-2.09;p=0.18), therapeutic shoes (RR, 0.34; 95% CI, [0.15-0.79]), and conventional therapy (RR, 1.76; 95% CI, [0.77-4.02]). There was no advantage of irremovable cast walkers over total contact casting. There was improved healing with half-shoe compared with conventional wound care. Therapeutic shoes and insoles reduced relapse rate in comparison with regular footwear. Data were sparse regarding other off-loading methods. This review included only a fraction of what other meta-analyses included.
- A 2015 systematic review and meta-analysis [40] analyzed 8 RCTs that compared non-removable pressure relieving device with removable cast walkers and concluded that non-removable devices are more effective in promoting DFU healing (RR 0.31 95% CI [0.19, 0.52] p<0.01). All studies analyzed by the 2013 Cochrane systematic review [44] were also included in this review. Studies were at moderate risk for bias (evidence level B).
- A 2013 Cochrane systematic review [44] analyzed 5 RCTs (230 participants) that compared non-removable total contact device with a removable device. Significantly more ulcers healed in the non-removable device group (RR 1.17 95% CI 1.01 to 1.36). Authors concluded that non-removable, pressure-relieving casts are more effective in healing DFUs than removable casts, or dressings alone. All five studies were overall at moderate risk of bias. The same review cited one RCT (50 participants) [47] which compared a removable cast walker (Aircast Diabetic Walker) with a temporary therapeutic half shoe. The trial had a moderate risk of bias as allocation concealment was unclear. Although there was no difference in the number of ulcers healed between the groups, time to healing in the removable cast walker group was six weeks compared with nine weeks in the temporary therapeutic shoe group. Significant difference in cumulative wound survival was noted by the study authors at 12 weeks between patients treated with a half shoe and RCW (P value 0.033).
- A 2013 systematic review [45] analyzed 11 RCT and 2 non-RCTs (661 participants) that compared non-removable off-loading devices (Total Contact Cast) and therapeutic shoes showed that the former were statistically significantly more effective at achieving complete healing of diabetic foot ulcers than therapeutic shoes, although there was substantial between-study heterogeneity (RR 1.68, 95% CI 1.09 to 2.58; six studies).Authors concluded that non-removable off-loading devices (regardless of type) were more likely to result in ulcer healing than removable off-loading devices.
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [37], the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines support offloading DFUs to promote ulcer healing. As for different modalities, while IWGDF and SVS strongly recommend non-removable devices (total contact cast-TCC, or irremovable fixed ankle knee high walking boot) as first line offloading modality for nonischemic, non-infected forefoot DFUs, WHS and WOCN do not specify a preferred modality. WHS recognizes crutches, walkers, wheelchairs, custom shoes, depth shoes, shoe modifications, custom inserts, custom relief orthotic walkers, diabetic boots, forefoot and heel relief shoes, and total contact casts as acceptable offloading methods for DFUs. As for levels of evidence for offloading non complex DFUs with a non-removable device, the IWGDF assigned level A (high quality) whereas SVS assigned level B (moderate quality). In reviewing the body of evidence on which IWGDF classed the quality of evidence, we noticed that it referred to 2 systematic reviews - a 2013 Cochrane review [44] and a 2015 review [45] - whose authors considered quality of evidence collected as moderate. Thus, we also concur with the authors of these systematic reviews and currently consider quality of the evidence body as moderate
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
Offloading with a total contact cast (TCC) or irremovable fixed ankle walking boot
|
1AGrade 1A
|
1BGrade 1B
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
SOE - Offloading removable walker
(back to text)
- Based on two relatively small RCTs [48] [201], there is moderate level evidence to suggest that a removable walker rendered irremovable is as effective as a TCC in healing neuropathic plantar forefoot ulcers (Relative risk ratio=1.06; 95% CI 0.88 – 1.27, p =0.31). Studies were industry sponsored, and were at unclear or high risk of bias for allocation concealment, blinding and incomplete outcome reporting
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [37], the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines support offloading DFUs to promote ulcer healing. The table below focuses on removable cast walkers
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
In patients with DFU requiring frequent dressing changes, off-loading with a removable cast walker as an alternative to TCC and irremovable fixed ankle walking boot
|
2BGrade 2B
|
2CGrade 2C
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
SOE - Offloading - conventional shoes to heal DFU
(back to text)
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [37], the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines support offloading DFUs to promote ulcer healing. However therapeutic shoes should not be used to promote DFU healing
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
Do not use conventional or standard therapeutic shoes to heal a DFU
|
1CGrade 1C
|
2CGrade 2C
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
SOE - Offloading non-plantar DFU
(back to text)
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [37], the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines support offloading DFUs to promote ulcer healing. The table below focuses on non-plantar DFUS
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
In patients with non-plantar wounds, use any modality that relieves pressure at the site of the ulcer
|
2CGrade 2C
|
1CGrade 1C
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
SOE- offloading surgical procedures to heal DFU
(back to text)
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [37], the 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines support offloading DFUs to promote ulcer healing. The table below focuses on offloading surgical procedures
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
Surgical Achilles tendon lengthening, single or pan metatarsal head resection, or joint arthroplasty when conservative treatment fails to heal non-complicated DFUs
|
2CGrade 2C
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Digital flexor tenotomy when conservative treatment fails,
to heal a distal toe ulcer in patients with non-complicated DFUs and hammertoes
|
2CGrade 2C
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
SOE - Intensive Glucose Control
(Back to text)
- A 2018 systematic review and meta-analysis [25] included 20 RCTs (1357 participants) and concluded that exercise has a significant effect on reducing HbA1c [ -0.45% (P< 0.00001)], while combined exercise is more effective compared to aerobic or resistance exercise alone [ -0.19% (P=0.1), -0.25% (P=0.0006), and -0.64% (P=0.006) for aerobic vs. resistance, combined vs. aerobic, and combined vs. resistance exercise, respectively]. Exercise also improves ABI [0.03 (P=0.002)]. However, evidence regarding the association between exercise and peripheral neuropathy and risks of diabetic foot ulcers in people with type 2 diabetes remains insufficient.
- A 2016 Cochrane review [24] could not qualify any RCT to analyze effects of intensive glucose control compared with conventional glucose control. Authors identified only 1 RCT that met the inclusion criteria but the trial was terminated due to recruiting difficulties. There are 2 ongoing trials but there are no results yet.Therefore authors were unable to conclude whether intensive glycemic control when compared to conventional glycemic control has a positive or detrimental effect on the treatment of DFU. Previous evidence has however highlighted a reduction in risk of limb amputation (due to various causes) in people with type 2 diabetes with intensive glycaemic control. [202] Whether this applies to people with foot ulcers in particular is unknown. Authors conclude that the exact role that intensive glycaemic control has in treating foot ulcers in multidisciplinary care (alongside other interventions targeted at treating foot ulcers) requires further investigation. The lack of evidence however should not deter efforts to achieve optimal glycemic control in people with diabetic foot ulcers to encourage healing as is current practice.
- A 2016 systematic review and meta-analysis [28] included 9 RCT (10,897 patients) that compared the effect of intensive glycemic control (HbA1c, 6%-7.5%) with less intensive glycemic control on lower extremity amputation in patients with type 2 diabetes. Studies were deemed to be at moderate risk of bias. Compared with less intensive glycemic control, intensive control was associated with a significant decrease in risk of amputation (RR= 0.65; 95% CI= 0.45-0.94). Authors concluded that compared with less intensive glycemic control therapy, intensive control may decrease the risk of amputation in patients with diabetic foot syndrome. The reported risk reduction is likely overestimated because the trials were open and the decision to proceed with amputation could be influenced by glycemic control.
- The 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26] guidelines recommend adequate glycemic control to promote DFU healing
Intervention
|
WOCN
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
Adequate glycemic control to promote DFU healing
|
Level B
|
2BGrade 2B
|
Level II
|
|
SOE- Nutrition
(Back to text)
Systematic review and meta-analyses:
- A 2016 systematic review and meta-analysis [203] included 3 RCTs (390 participants) that compared nutritional support with no nutritional support to promote DFU healing or preserve a limb [34] [204] [205] Authors concluded that nutritional support was of value to promote DFU healing (RR = 1.17, 95% CI = 0.93-1.47). However, nutritional interventions across the 3 studies varied significantly (herbal concoction [204], extra calories [205] or arginine, glutamine and ß-hydroxy-ß-methylbutyrate [34] and the pooled result of the meta-analysis is not statistically significant.
- A 2013 systematic review [206] identified 4 human studies and 9 animal studies related to diabetes and wound healing. Authors concluded that while supplement studies in animal models with arginine and vitamin E were positive, there were no significant differences in the human studies reviewed. More human studies need to be conducted to determine the efficacy of these nutritional supplements in promoting wound healing.
Randomized Clinical Trials:
- In 2014, Armstrong et al. [34] conducted a RCT (270 participants) that compared the effect of an oral supplement enriched with arginine, glutamine, and ß-hydroxy-ß-methylbutyrate with a standard supplement on DFU healing at 16 weeks in patients with UT 1A DFUs. However, this study found no difference in patients where the albumin was normal. There was positive effect in patients with poor limb perfusion and/or low albumin. This would indicate that appropriate nutritional interventions could potentially help individuals who have either nutritional deficiencies or unreconstructable peripheral vascular disease. [32] This study was industry sponsored and had a surrogate endpoint (evidence level B)
- In 2008, Leung et al [204], conducted a RCT (80 participants) comparing nutritional supplementation with a herbal concoction and placebo in limb salvage in patients with DFU. Limb salvage was achieved in 85% of the patients. Among the early failures, three each came from the treatment and placebo groups. After shifting to herbal treatment (without unblinding of the original treatment), all were rescued in those initially assigned to herbal concoction (6 out of 6) while only 50% (6 out of 12) were rescued from among those initially assigned to placebo. Study is at high level of bias due to selective reporting and different baseline demographics between groups (evidence level C)
- In 2004, Eneroth et al. [205] conducted a RCT (53 participants) comparing the effects of extra calories (400 kcal) with placebo in DFU healing of patients aged over 60 with diabetes mellitus and a Wagner grade I-II foot ulcer of over four weeks' duration. A third of the patients were malnourished. There was no statistically significant difference between the outcomes of the two groups. Authors concluded that they encountered several methodological problems and were unable to demonstrate an improved wound healing rate in these patients. Study is at high level of bias due to selective reporting (evidence level B)
Observational studies
- In 2013, Zhang et al. [207] conducted an observational study to investigate the relationship between indicators correlated to nutritional status and outcome. A total of 192 hospitalized patients with Wagner grade 1-5 ulcers and 60 patients with Wagner grade 0 ulcers (all had type 2 diabetes) were assessed by the following: subjective global assessment (SGA), anthropometric measurements, biochemical indicators and physical examinations to evaluate nutritional status, severity of infection and complications. Patient outcome was recorded as healing of the ulcer and the patients were followed up for 6 months or until the wound was healed. The percentage of malnutrition was 62.0% in the DFU patients. The risk of poor outcome increased with malnutrition [odds ratio (OR), 10.6, P< 0.001]. The nutritional status of the DFU patients was independently correlated with the severity of infection and outcome (both P< 0.001) and Wagner grades and nutritional status (SGA) were independent risk factors for patient outcome (both P< 0.001). Nutritional status deteriorated as the severity of the DFU increased, and malnutrition was a predictor of poor prognosis.
|
SOE - Adjunctive Therapy: Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy
(Back to text):
We reviewed the clinical guidelines, systematic reviews, meta-analyses and clinical trials summarized below. Applying the GRADE framework to the combined body of evidence, we found that:
- Moderate certainty evidence supports the use of HBO as an adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing and prevent amputation (evidence level B). The systematic reviews and meta-analyses [208][209] included the same RCTs. Both agreed that HBO as an adjunctive therapy significantly improved DFU healing, however they differed in regards to amputation prevention. The 2015 Cochrane meta-analysis [208] calculated the relative risk between intervention and control, and the 2016 SVS-commissioned meta-analysis [209] calculated the Peto odds ratio, which was considered by authors of the 2016 meta-analysis as more precise. Clinical guidelines also relied on the same RCTs to grade evidence, however their classification system differed. In analyzing the RCTs, most were small and were at high or moderate risk of bias, however one larger RCT (94 participants) [210] was better designed and can be considered of moderate evidence level (evidence level B)
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses
- A 2017 systematic review and meta-analysis [211] included 9 RCTs (n=526 participants). No difference was found in the incidence of healed ulcers (risk ratio [RR] = 2.22; 95% CI, 0.87–5.62;P=0.32), minor amputations (RR=0.95; 95% CI, 0.39–2.29;p=0.91), major amputations (RR=0.47; 95% CI, 0.17–1.28;p=0.14, and adverse events (RR=1.00; 95% CI, 0.64– 1.56;P=0.99) between the HBOT and standard therapy (ST) groups. HBOT was associated with a greater reduction in the ulcer wound area versus ST (standard mean difference=1.12; 95% CI,0.20–2.04;P=0.04). Evidence can be considered of low certainty, due to small size of each RCT, heterogeneity of treatment protocols among RCTs. One large RCT that likely skewed the overall results of the meta-analysis was largely criticized by experts due to methodological flaws (e.g., surrogate endpoint/outcome: analysis of outcome "amputation" was not the actual amputation per se, but impression of a single vascular surgeon based on patients' photos and clinical information on whether amputation was indicated or not).
- A 2016 systematic review and meta-analysis [209] included 18 studies, of which 9 were RCTs, enrolling 1526 participants in total. Based on six RCTs, HBOT was associated with increased healing rate (OR, 14.25; 95% CI, 7.08-28.68, I2 = 0%) and reduced major amputation rate (OR, 0.30; 95% CI, 0.10-0.89, I2 = 59%) compared with conventional therapy. The quality of this evidence is considered low to moderate, potentially downgraded due to methodologic limitations of the included studies. In the experimental groups, HBO was given in addition to conventional therapy (wound care and offloading). In most studies, HBO was given at 2.0 to 3.0 atmospheric pressure in daily 90-minute sessions in a monoplace or multiplace chamber. On average, patients received 30 sessions, although a few patients in one study received 60 sessions [212] [213]. Authors concluded that there is low- to moderate-quality evidence supporting the use of HBO as an adjunctive therapy to enhance DFU healing and potentially prevent amputation.
- A 2015 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [208] pooled data of 5 RCTs (205 participants) (149,151) [214] [215], showed an increase in the rate of ulcer healing (RR: 2.35, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.19 - 4.62; P = 0.01) with HBO at six weeks but this benefit was not evident at longer-term follow-up at one year. There was no statistically significant difference in major amputation rate (pooled data of 5 RCTs with 312 participants, RR 0.36, 95% CI 0.11 - 1.18). Authors concluded that In people with foot ulcers due to diabetes, HBOT significantly improved the ulcers healed in the short term but not the long term and the trials had various flaws in design and/or reporting that means we are not confident in the results.
Randomized controlled trials (not included in earlier systematic reviews)
- A 2017 RCT (157 participants) [216]compared outcomes of patients with DFU (Wagner 2-4) who received HBO and standard of care with those who received sham and standard of care only. In addition to comprehensive wound care, participants were randomly assigned to receive 30 daily sessions of 90 min of HBOT (breathing oxygen at 244 kPa) or sham (breathing air at 125 kPa). Patients, physicians, and researchers were blinded to group assignment. At 12 weeks post randomization, the primary outcome was freedom from meeting the criteria for amputation as assessed by a vascular surgeon. Secondary outcomes were measures of wound healing. Criteria for major amputation were met in 13 of 54 patients in the sham group and 11 of 49 in the HBOT group (odds ratio 0.91 [95% CI 0.37, 2.28], P = 0.846). Twelve (22%) patients in the sham group and 10 (20%) in the HBOT group were healed (0.90 [0.35, 2.31], P = 0.823). Authors concluded that HBOT does not offer an additional advantage to comprehensive wound care in reducing the indication for amputation or facilitating wound healing in patients with chronic DFUs. This RCT was heavily criticized by experts in the field for potential methodological flaws.[117][118][119][119] Authors of this RCT concurred that actual amputation rates could not be measured and instead a surrogate endpoint/outcome was used [121] - a single vascular surgeon evaluated patients' photos and clinical data (but not the actual patient in most cases) and deemed whether amputation was indicated or not. Also, authors did not select candidates most likely to benefit from HBO as measured by established transcutaneous oximetry assessment protocols.
Clinical guidelines
- The 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26], the 2014 Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine Society (UHMS) [115] and the 2017 European Committee for Hyperbaric Medicine (ECHM) [116] guidelines support the use of HBO as an adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing and prevent amputation
Intervention
|
SVS
|
WHS
|
WOCN
|
UHMS
|
ECHM
|
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy as adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing and reduce amputation rates
|
2BGrade 2B
|
Level I
|
Level B
|
AHA Class I
|
2BGrade 2B
|
Observational studies:
- A recent longitudinal observational cohort study by Margolis et al [217] on 6259 individuals with diabetes, adequate lower limb arterial perfusion, and foot ulcer found that the use of HBO neither improved the likelihood of healing nor prevented amputation in a cohort of patients defined by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services eligibility criteria.The authors concluded that the usefulness of HBO in patients with DFUs needs to be reevaluated.
|
SOE - Adjunctive Therapy: Negative Pressure Wound Therapy
(Back to text)
We reviewed the clinical guidelines, systematic reviews, meta-analyses and clinical trials summarized below. Applying the GRADE framework to the combined body of evidence, we found that:
- Low certainty evidence supports the use of negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) as an adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing for both postoperative wounds (i.e. wound from a diabetic foot amputation) and non-surgical DFUs (evidence level C).
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses:
- A 2018 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [128] included 11 RCTs (972 participants). This is an update of the 2013 systematic review described here.[126] Authors concluded that there is low-certainty evidence to suggest that NPWT, when compared with wound dressings, may increase the proportion of wounds healed and reduce the time to healing for postoperative foot wounds and ulcers of the foot in people with DM. For the comparisons of different pressures of NPWT for treating foot ulcers in people with DM, it is uncertain whether there is a difference in the number of wounds closed or covered with surgery, and adverse events. Specifically, for NPWT compared with dressings for postoperative wounds: data from the two studies suggest that it is uncertain whether there is a difference between groups in amputation risk (RR 0.38, 95% CI 0.14 to 1.02; 292 participants; very low-certainty evidence, downgraded once for risk of bias and twice for imprecision. For NPWT compared with dressings for foot ulcers: Data from three studies (441 participants) suggest that people allocated to NPWT may be at reduced risk of amputation compared with people allocated to dressings (RR 0.33, 95% CI 0.15 to 0.70; I² = 0%; low-certainty evidence; downgraded once for risk of bias and once for imprecision). For low-pressure compared with high-pressure NPWT for foot ulcers: There was no clear difference in the number of wounds closed or covered with surgery between groups (RR 0.83, 95% CI 0.47 to 1.47; very low-certainty evidence, downgraded once for risk of bias and twice for serious imprecision) and adverse events (RR 1.50, 95% CI 0.28 to 8.04; very low-certainty evidence, downgraded once for risk of bias and twice for serious imprecision).
- A 2014 AHRQ systematic review included 7 studies that evaluated NPWT in the home setting. Authors were unable to draw conclusions about the efficacy or safety of NPWT for the treatment of chronic wounds in the home setting due to insufficient evidence. Though NPWT has been used across the wound care spectrum, significant research gaps remain.[218]
- A 2014 systematic review and meta-analysis [219] included 8 RCTs (669 participants). Overall, compared with the non–negative-pressure wound therapy–treated diabetic foot ulcers, negative pressure resulted in a significantly higher proportion of healed ulcers (relative risk, 1.52; 95 percent CI, 1.23 to 1.89; p < 0.001), more reduction of ulcer area (standardized mean difference, 0.89; 95 percent CI, 0.41 to 1.37; p = 0.003), and shorter time to wound healing (standardized mean difference, -1.10; 95 percent CI, -1.83 to -0.37; p = 0.003). Negative-pressure wound therapy patients also experienced significantly fewer major amputations (relative risk, 0.14; 95 percent CI, 0.04 to 0.51; p = 0.003), but the rate of minor amputations was not affected (p = 0.837). No significant difference was observed between negative-pressure wound therapy and non–negative-pressure wound therapy (p = 0.683). No heterogeneity among studies was detected. Authors concluded that negative-pressure wound therapy appears to be more effective for diabetic foot ulcers compared with non–negative-pressure wound therapy, and has a similar safety profile. However, authors recognized that results could have been affected by some limitations of the design of the meta-analysis, such as the fact that baseline ulcer characterization was not standardized. The meta-analysis pooled data from RCTs with different patient conditions; for instance, in one RCT patients had post-amputation wounds and in another, patients had debrided DFU but no previous amputation. [220][221] Many of the RCTs in this review were excluded from the 2013 Cochrane review due to lack of relevant outcome, or not being a RCT due to lack of randomized allocation (using alternation instead). Furthermore, this 2014 meta-analysis pooled studies that have different patient populations, who either used NPWT post lower extremity amputation or after a debrided DFU with no previous amputation. These types of patients represent different indications of NPWT and are too different to be pooled.
- A 2013 Cochrane systematic review included 5 RCT (605 participants).[126]Two studies (total of 502 participants) [220][221] compared negative pressure wound therapy with standard moist wound dressings. The first of these [220] was conducted in people with DM and post-amputation wounds and reported that significantly more people healed in the negative pressure wound therapy group compared with the moist dressing group: (risk ratio 1.44; 95% CI 1.03 to 2.01). The second study [221], conducted in people with debrided foot ulcers, also reported a statistically significant increase in the proportion of ulcers healed in the negative pressure wound therapy group compared with the moist dressing group: (risk ratio 1.49; 95% CI 1.11 to 2.01). However, authors noted that these studies were at risk of performance bias, so caution is required in their interpretation. Findings from the remaining three studies provided limited data, as they were small, with limited reporting, as well as being at unclear risk of bias. Authors concluded that there is some evidence to suggest that negative pressure wound therapy is more effective in healing post-operative foot wounds and ulcers of the foot in people with DM compared with moist wound dressings. However, these findings are uncertain due to the possible risk of bias in the original studies. (Evidence level C). The larger trials included in the 2013 Cochrane review [126] were considered by authors as low quality evidence due to lack of assessor and patient blinding and attrition bias (evidence level C).
Clinical guidelines
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [87], 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27], the 2012 Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) [26], guidelines support the use of NPWT as an adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing.
- The IWGDF analyzed 2 groups of patients: patients with non-surgical DFUs and patients with post-surgical wounds. Evidence of use of NPWT for patients with non-surgical DFUs was considered of low certainty, while use of NPWT for post-surgical wounds was considered of moderate certainty. However, upon analyzing the studies on which recommendations were made, it was noted that the evidence grading for post-surgical wounds was based on 2 large RCTs and 1 small RCT, and 1 of the large RCTs [221] was not related to post-surgical wounds, but to non-surgical wounds.
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
WHS
|
SVS
|
WOCN
|
Negative pressure wound therapy to promote DFU healing
|
Weak, moderate
|
Level I
|
2BGrade 2B
|
Level C
|
|
SOE - Adjunctive Therapy: Skin autografts
(Back to text)
Low certainty evidence provided mainly by a observational study [139] support use of autologous skin grafts as wound coverage to treat DFUs (evidence level C). There appears to be no difference in outcome between meshed skin graft or split thickness skin graft in DFU coverage (evidence level C). [140]
Randomized clinical trials:
- In 2004, Puttirutvong et al [140] conducted the only RCT studying autografts for treatment of DFUs. The study involved 80 participants and compared meshed skin graft with split thickness skin graft in DFU coverage. There was no difference in outcome between the 2 groups of patients. This study is considered by a Cochrane systematic review as being at unclear risk of bias [149]
Observational study:
- A 2008 non-randomized case-controlled prospective comparative study [139] (100 participants) compared autologous skin grafting (graft group) with conservative dressings (control group) in promoting DFU healing. Wound management in both groups was standardised with regard to the dressing materials (which comprised a multilayer dressing including paraffin gauze and diluted povidone-iodine soaked gauze), wound care and surgeon involvement. The mean healing time and mean length of hospital stay were significantly shorter in the graft group compared with the control group (p<0.001). Authors concluded that split-skin grafting is an effective method of managing diabetic foot ulcers as, compared with the conservative dressings used in this study, it reduced healing times and the length of hospital stay, while donor-site morbidity was minimal.
|
SOE - Cellular and/or Tissue Products
(Back to Text)
Systematic reviews
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [149] included 17 RCTs (1655 participants) that compared skin grafts or skin substitutes in conjunction with standard of care (SC) with standard care alone or with another skin graft or skin equivalent to promote healing of DFU and reduce amputation rates. Based on the studies included in this review, the overall therapeutic effect of skin grafts and tissue replacements used in conjunction with standard care shows an increase in the healing rate of foot ulcers [13 RCTs, risk ratio (RR) 1.55, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.30 to 1.85, low quality of evidence) and slightly fewer amputations in people with diabetes compared with standard care alone (RR 0.43, 95% CI 0.23 to 0.81; risk difference (RD) -0.06, 95% CI -0.10 to -0.01, very low quality of evidence). No specific type of skin graft or tissue replacement showed a superior effect on ulcer healing over another type of skin graft or tissue replacement. In addition, evidence of long term effectiveness is lacking and cost-effectiveness is uncertain.
Guidelines
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [87], 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27] guidelines support the use of CPT as an adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
WHS
|
SVS
|
Do not select bioengineered skin products in preference to accepted standards of good quality care
|
Strong, low
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Cellular and acellular skin equivalents to improve healing of DFUs that fail to demonstrate improvement(>50% wound area reduction) after a minimum of 4 weeks of standard wound therapy
|
n/a
|
Level I
|
Grade 1B |
|
SOE - Cellular and/or Tissue Products: Human Skin Allografts
(Back to text) -Systematic reviews- A 2023 systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated 38 RCTs (3862 patients) and concluded that placenta-based tissue products exhibited the best wound healing probability (p-score = 0.90), followed by skin substitutes with living cells (p-score = 0.70), acellular skin substitutes (p-score = 0.56), and advanced topical dressings (p-score = 0.34) compared with standard of care. [150]
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated 2 RCT (114 participants) that compared the effectiveness of GraftJacket (a human skin allograft derived from acellular human dermis) with standard care only in promoting DFU healing. GraftJacket was more effective than standard of care in healing DFU [RR 1.9, 95% CI, (0.97, 3.71)]. The 2 RCTs are at unclear or high risk of bias due to detection bias (evidence level C) [149]
- Randomized controlled trials
- A 2022 industry-sponsored RCT (n=100 patients) by Armstrong et al [155] compared the response of 100 subjects with non-healing Wagner 1 DFUs of which 50 were treated with weekly cryopreserved bioactive split thickness skin allograft (BSA) (TheraSkin; Misonix,Inc., Farmingdale, NY) and standard of care with 50 subjects treated with standard of care (SOC, collagen alginate dressing) for 12 weeks or until healed. Both groups received standardized care that included glucose monitoring, weekly debridement's as appropriate, and an offloading device. The result illustrated in the intent-to-treat analysis at 12 weeks showed that 76% (38/50) of the BSA-treated DFUs healed compared with 36% (18/50) treated with SOC alone (adjusted P = .00056). Mean PAR at 12 weeks was 77.8% in the BSA group compared with 49.6% in the SOC group (adjusted P = .0019). The average time for closure within the 12‐week period for BSA was 46.9 days, with an average of 6.7 applications (95% CI: 38.7‐55.1) vs closure with SOC was 65.3 days (95% CI: 57.7‐72.9). This difference was statistically significant (P = .0019). Authors concluded that adding BSA to SOC appeared to significantly improve wound healing with a lower incidence of adverse events related to treatment compared with SOC alone. Evidence can be considered of moderate certainty due to lack of blinding of healthcare personnel and patients (evidence level B).
- A 2017 industry-sponsored RCT (168 participants) by Cazzell et al.[151] compared the efficacy and safety of a human acellular dermal matrix (ADM) - DermACELL, D-ADM, with a conventional care arm and an active comparator human ADM arm, GJ-ADM - GraftJacket, for the treatment of chronic diabetic foot ulcers. Single application D-ADM subjects showed significantly greater wound closure rates than conventional care at all three endpoints while all applications D-ADM displayed a significantly higher healing rate than conventional care at Week 16 and Week 24. GJ-ADM did not show a significantly greater healing rate over conventional care at any of these time points. Authors concluded that D-ADM demonstrated significantly greater wound healing, larger wound area reduction, and a better capability of keeping healed wounds closed than conventional care in the treatment of chronic DFUs. Evidence can be considered of low certainty due to lack of blinding of healthcare personnel and patients, and lack of standardization in criteria for a second application of ADM)
- A 2011 RCT (28 participants) by DiDomenico et al. [156] compared the efficacy of Theraskin (a human skin allograft derived from cadaveric split thickness skin graft) and Apligraf (a composite matrix that is a bioengineered skin substitute), in treating DFUs and found no statistically significant difference between the patient groups. Authors assessed 29 wounds from 28 patients—17 wounds received Apligraf and 12 wounds received Theraskin. At 12 weeks, Theraskin closed 66.7% of wounds and Apligraf closed 41.3% of wounds. At 20 weeks, the Theraskin closure rate remained at 66.7% and the Apligraf closure rate increased to 47.1% (RR 0.71 95% CI (0.37-1.34). [149]. Most patients received only a single application of either Theraskin or Apligraf, and the average wound closure time was 5 weeks for the Theraskin group and 6.86 weeks for the Apligraf group. No unexpected adverse effects were reported in this study [148]
|
SOE - Cellular and/or Tissue Products: Allogeneic Matrices
(Back to text)
AM derived from human neonatal fibroblasts of the foreskin
- Systematic reviews
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis included 3 RCTs (620 participants) [222][223][224] that compared the effectiveness of Dermagraft (Smith and Nephew, Largo, FL, USA) a cryopreserved human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute to standard wound care in promoting DFU healing. The meta-analysis showed that significantly more DFUs treated with Dermagraft healed than DFUs treated with standard care only [RR 1.5, CI 95%, (0.85, 2.65)][149] 1 RCT (314 participants) [223] evaluated the effectiveness of Dermagraft in preventing amputations and found that among patients with DFUs treated with Dermagraft compared to standard of care only there was a lower incidence of amputation [RR-0.04, CI 95%, (-0.09, 0.01)]. The body of evidence can be considered of moderate certainty (Evidence level B), downgraded as a result of risk of bias due to lack of blinding of outcome assessment.
AM derived from amniotic/chorion/placental tissues
- Systematic reviews
- A 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis [164] included 6 RCTs (312 DFUs) comparing human-derived acellular dermal matrices (H-ADMs) with standard of care (SOC) to evaluate the number of healed ulcers at 12 and 16 weeks and number of days to complete healing. As a secondary outcome, the efficacy of 3 H-ADM subtypes are studied. The results show H-ADMs are more effective in healing patients within a 12-week (3.14; range, 2.04-4.83) and 16-week period (2.35; range, 1.25-4.43) in comparison with SOC. Further, the mean time to complete healing was shorter in the H-ADM group (-2.31 days; range, -2.67 to -1.95 days) in comparison with SOC. Within the subgroups, 2 H-ADMs were associated with a higher likelihood of complete healing within 12 weeks when compared with SOC. The third H-ADM had a point estimate, which suggested superiority over SOC. Authors concluded that H-ADMs are associated with a higher likelihood of complete healing and fewer days to complete healing within a 12-week and 16-week periods when compared with SOC. Also, the commercial products performed similarly.
- A 2018 systematic review and meta-analysis [225] included 6 RCTs (331 participants) and compared effectiveness of amniotic membrane with standard of care. Meta-analysis showed that DFUs treated with amniotic membranes healed on average 32 days faster compared to those treated with standard of care 32.38 [CI:-41.05;-23.71] but this result was not statistically significant (p=0.83) with a 95 %CI. Also, wound healing in the group treated with amniotic membrane occurs 2.32 times more often than in the control group, but this result is not statistically significant either. Among the RCTs included, the largest RCT (n=100) [160] showed that amniotic membrane (EpiFix) promoted complete and faster healing of more DFUs compared to Apligraf or standard care, and was more cost-effective than Apligraf (adjusted P = 0.00019).
- A 2017 systematic review and meta-analysis [226] included 7 RCTs showed that patients receiving amniotic membrane + standard therapy had far fewer incomplete healing wounds than those receiving standard of care alone. Assessment of the wound healing state at 4 and 6 weeks revealed that the wound healing state was almost the same, but there was a net difference of wound healing state at 12 weeks (Z = 4.96; P<0.00001; OR 0.10; 95% CI 0.04–0.24). Authors concluded that human amnion/chorion membrane + standard of care treatment heals DFUs significantly faster than standard of care alone. When using the amnion in patients with DFUs, the optimal times to assess progress in wound healing should be 4 and 12 weeks.
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review included 1 RCTs (25 participants) that compared the effectiveness of EpiFix [159] to standard wound care in promoting DFU healing. The meta-analysis showed that significantly more DFUs treated with EpiFix healed than DFUs treated with standard care only [RR 11.08, CI 95% (1.69, 72.82)].[149] The group using EpiFix also had a statistically significant lower incidence of amputations [RR 0.19, CI 95%, (0.01, 3.52)]. Evidence can be considered of low certainty (evidence level C) downgraded as a result of risk of bias due to lack of blinding of outcome assessment and lack of blinding of participants and personnel [149]
- Randomized controlled trials (recent) - A 2020 industry-sponsored RCT (n=76 DFUs) [165] aimed to determine the effectiveness of hypothermically stored amniotic membrane (HSAM) versus standard of care (SOC) in diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). HSAM was applied directly with the stromal side in contact with the wound per manufacturer specifications on the open ulcer bed at weekly intervals or until healed. Authors found that the Cox wound closure for HSAM (38 wounds) was significantly greater (p = 0.04) at weeks 12 (60 vs 38%), and 16 (63 vs 38%). The probability of wound closure increased by 75% (Hazard Ratio = 1.75; 95% CI: 1.16-2.70). HSAM showed >60% reductions in area (82 vs 58%; p = 0.02) and depth (65 vs 39%; p = 0.04) versus SOC. Authors concluded that HSAM increased frequency and probability of wound closure in DFUs versus SOC. Limitations of this trial included the lack of blinding in using a skin substitute compared with standard bandages as the primary wound contact material.
- A 2018 industry-sponsored non-inferiority RCT (62 participants) [167] compared viable, cryopreserved human placental membrane with bilayered bioengineered skin (Apligraf) in the treatment of chronic DFU. The proportion of patients achieving complete wound closure at 9 weeks was similar (9.68, 90% CI: [10.67, 28.94]), but cost of treatment of DFUs < 5cm2 with cryopreserved human placental membrane was lower (level of evidence can be considered of moderate certainty B, due to lack of blinding of healthcare personnel and patients)
- A 2018 RCT (155 participants)[166] analyzed safety and effectiveness of dehydrated human umbilical cord allograft (EpiCord) compared with alginate wound dressings for the treatment of chronic, non-healing DFU. The primary study endpoint was the percentage of complete closure of the study ulcer within 12 weeks. ITT analysis showed that DFUs treated with EpiCord were more likely to heal within 12 weeks than those receiving alginate dressings, 71 of 101 (70%) vs 26 of 54 (48%) for EpiCord and alginate dressings, respectively, P = 0.0089. Healing rates at 12 weeks for subjects treated PP were 70 of 86 (81%) for EpiCord-treated and 26 of 48 (54%) for alginate-treated DFUs, P = 0.0013. For those DFUs that received adequate debridement (n = 107, ITT population), 64 of 67 (96%) of the EpiCord-treated ulcers healed completely within 12 weeks, compared with 26 of 40 (65%) of adequately debrided alginate-treated ulcers, P < 0.0001. Seventy-five subjects experienced at least one adverse event, with a total of 160 adverse events recorded. There were no adverse events related to either EpiCord or alginate dressings. Evidence can be considered of moderate certainty (level B) due to lack of assessor, provider and patient blinding. Study was industry-sponsored.
- A 2018 RCT (110 participants) [162] compared efficacy of dehydrated human amnion/ chorion membrane allograft (dHACM) with alginate in treating non-healing DFU. Patients were randomly assigned to receive weekly dHACM application in addition to offloading or standard of care with alginate wound dressings, for 12 weeks. The primary study outcome was percentage of study ulcers completely healed in 12 weeks, with both ITT and per-protocol participants receiving weekly dHACM significantly more likely to completely heal than those not receiving dHACM (ITT — 70% versus 50%, P = 0.0338, per-protocol — 81% versus 55%, P = 0.0093). Evidence can be considered of moderate certainty (level B) due to lack of provider and patient blinding. Study was industry-sponsored.
- A 2016 RCT (40 participants) [227] compared aseptically processed dehydrated human amnion and chorion allograft (dHACA, Amnioband) versus standard of care (SOC) in facilitating wound closure in nonhealing DFUs. At 6 weeks, 70% (14/20) of the dHACA-treated DFUs healed compared with 15% (3/20) treated with SOC alone. Furthermore, at 12 weeks, 85% (17/20) of the DFUs in the dHACA group healed compared with 25% (5/20) in the SOC group, with a corresponding mean time to heal of 36 and 70 days, respectively. At 12 weeks, the mean number of grafts used per healed wound for the dHACA group was 3.8 (median 3.0), and mean cost of the tissue to heal a DFU was $1400. Authors concluded that aseptically processed dHACA heals diabetic foot wounds significantly faster than SOC at 6 and 12 weeks with minimal graft wastage. Evidence can be considered of low certainty (level C) due to small size, lack of allocation concealment. Study was industry-sponsored.
- A 2016 RCT (29 participants) evaluated dehydrated amniotic membrane allograft (AmnioExcel, Derma Sciences Inc, Princeton, NJ) plus standard of care (SOC) compared to SOC alone for the closure of chronic diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). [161] Thirty-three percent of subjects in the DAMA+SOC cohort achieved complete wound closure at or before week 6, compared with 0% of the SOC alone cohort (intent-to-treat population, P = 0.017). Evidence can be considered of low certainty (evidence level C) due to high risk of bias (surrogate endpoint and small trial size)
- A 2016 RCT (100 participants) [160] compared effectiveness of EpiFix (dehydrated amniotic membrane), Apligraf and standard care in promoting DFU healing after 12 weeks of care. Authors found that EpiFix promoted complete and faster healing of more DFUs compared to Apligraf or standard care, and was more cost-effective than Apligraf (adjusted P = 0.00019). No difference in probability of healing was observed for the Apligraf and SWC groups. Median number of grafts used per healed wound were 6 (range 1–13) and 2.5 (range 1–12) for the Apligraf and EpiFix groups, respectively. Median graft cost was $8918 (range $1,486–19,323) per healed wound for the Apligraf group and $1,517 (range $434–25,710) per healed wound in the EpiFix group ( P < 0·0001). Evidence can be considered of moderate uncertainty (evidence level B) due to lack of blinding of personnel and participants.
Prospective studies - A 2019 industry-sponsored non-randomized, non-controlled, prospective, multicenter study (n=60) [228] evaluated the efficacy and safety of an acellular dermal matrix allograft, DermACELL (D-ADM; LifeNet Health, Virginia Beach, Virginia), in the treatment of large, complex diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) that probed to tendon or bone (Wagner grade 3 or 4 DFUs between 4 weeks and 1 year in duration). All participants received one application of D-ADM at baseline and could receive one additional application if wound healing arrested. Ulcers were assessed weekly for 16 weeks using a laser measuring device. Sixty-one participants were enrolled, with an average wound area of 29.0 cm; 59 of these ulcers showed exposed bone. The entire per-protocol population (n = 47) achieved 100% granulation. The mean time to 100% granulation was 4.0 weeks with an average of 1.2 applications of D-ADM. Mean percent wound area reduction was 80.3% at 16 weeks. Those DFUs 15 cm or smaller were substantially more likely to close than DFUs larger than 29 cm (P = .0008) over a 16-week duration. No complications were associated with the use of the studied matrix. Authors concluded that D-ADM demonstrated the ability to rapidly reduce the size of large, complex DFUs with exposed bone. Some wounds did not completely heal by 16 weeks; however, the significant reduction in size suggests that these large, complex wounds may heal if given more time. This study lacks control arm and is industry-sponsored.
|
SOE - Cellular and/or Tissue Products: Composite Matrices
(Back to text)
Systematic reviews
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review included 2 RCTs (290 participants) [229][230] that compared the effectiveness of Apligraf to standard wound care in promoting DFU healing. The meta-analysis showed that significantly more DFUs healed when treated with Apligraf than when treated with standard care only [RR 1.55, CI 95% (1.17, 2.04)].[149] Evidence by the combined studies can be considered of moderate certainty (evidence level B) downgraded as a result of risk of bias due to lack of blinding of participants and personnel [149]
Randomized controlled trials
- A 2016 RCT (100 participants) [160] compared effectiveness of EpiFix (dehydrated amniotic membrane), Apligraf and standard care in promoting DFU healing after 12 weeks of care. Authors found that EpiFix promoted complete and faster healing of more DFUs compared to Apligraf or standard care (adjusted P = 0.00019), and was more cost-effective than Apligraf. No difference in probability of healing was observed for the Apligraf and standard care groups. Median number of grafts used per healed wound were 6 (range 1–13) and 2.5 (range 1–12) for the Apligraf and EpiFix groups, respectively. Median graft cost was $8918 (range $1,486–19,323) per healed wound for the Apligraf group and $1,517 (range $434–25,710) per healed wound in the EpiFix group ( P < 0.0001). Evidence can be considered of moderate uncertainty (evidence level B) due to lack of blinding of personnel and participants.
- A 2011 RCT (28 participants) by DiDomenico et al. [156] compared the efficacy of Theraskin and Apligraf (Organogenesis, Canton, MA, USA), a bioengineered skin substitute, in treating DFUs and found no statistically significant difference between the patient groups. The authors hypothesized that Theraskin and Apligraf would yield the same results for wound closure rate and number of grafts required when treating DFU. DiDomenico et al. assessed 29 wounds from 28 patients—17 wounds received Apligraf and 12 wounds received Theraskin. At 12 weeks, Theraskin closed 66.7% of wounds and Apligraf closed 41.3% of wounds. At 20 weeks, the Theraskin closure rate remained at 66.7% and the Apligraf closure rate increased to 47.1% (RR 0.71 95% CI (0.37-1.34). [149]. Most patients received only a single application of either Theraskin or Apligraf, and the average wound closure time was 5 weeks for the Theraskin group and 6.86 weeks for the Apligraf group. No unexpected adverse effects were reported in this study [148]
Cost-effectiveness studies
- A 2016 industry-sponsored, retrospective cost and effectiveness study (13,193 skin substitute treatment episodes) [168] compared the relative product cost and clinical outcomes of four skin substitutes used as adjunctive treatments for DFUs (Apligraf-HML, Dermagraft-HSL, OASIS-SIS, and MatriStem-UBM), as per 2011-2014 Medicare claims data. The percentage of DFUs that healed at 90 days were: UBM 62%; SIS 63%; HML 58%; and HSL 58%. Medicare reimbursements for skin substitutes per DFU episode for UBM ($1435 in skin substitutes per episode) and SIS ($1901) appeared to be equivalent to each other. Both were less than HML ($5364) or HSL ($14,424) (p<0.0005 in all four tests). HML was less costly than HSL (p<0.0005). Analysis of the four skin-substitute types resulted in a demonstration that UBM and SIS were associated with both shorter DFU episode lengths and lower payer reimbursements than HML and HSL, while HML was less costly than HSL but equivalent in healing.
|
SOE - Cellular and/or Tissue Products: Acellular Matrices
(Back to text)
Systematic reviews
- A 2022 systematic review and meta-analysis included 9 RCTs (n=897 patients) [169] examined the efficacy and safety of acellular matrix (AM) therapy for patients with DFUs. Authors found that compared with the standard therapy (ST) group, patients allocated to AM group had a higher complete healing rate both at 12 weeks (risk ratio (RR) = 1.73, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.31 to 2.30) and 16 weeks (RR = 1.56, 95% CI: 1.28 to 1.91), a shorter time to complete healing (mean difference (MD) = −2.41; 95% CI: -3.49 to -1.32), and fewer adverse events (RR = 0.64, 95% CI: 0.44 to 0.93). Authors concluded that AM therapy as an adjuvant treatment could further promote the healing of full-thickness, noninfected, and nonischemia DFUs. Evidence can be considered of low certainty (level c) due to sponsorship bias, differences in AM products and standard therapies in each study, relatively small sample size of each study.
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review included 1 RCTs (26 participants) [173] that compared the effectiveness of Oasis to that of Dermagraft (allogeneic matrix) in promoting DFU healing. There was no statistically significant difference between the groups [RR 1.1, CI 95% (0.75 - 1.6)].[149] Authors also evaluated cost of dressings. Average number of Dermagraft dressings applied was 2.54 ± 0.78, while the average number of Oasis applied was 6.46 ± 1.39. This translates to an estimated cost of $3505 for Dermagraft dressings ($1380 each) and an estimated cost of $807 for Oasis dressings ($125 each) - these amounts did not include nursing time, which can add significant costs to the treatment. This issue was addressed by Gilligan et al [158] Evidence can be considered of low certainty (evidence level C) due to high risk of bias from lack of blinding of assessors, participants and personnel and small sample size [149]
Randomized controlled trials
- A 2021 industry-sponsored RCT (n=207 patients) by Lantis et al [171] evaluated the safety and efficacy of a fetal bovine acellular dermal matrix (FBADM, PriMatrix) plus standard of care (SOC) for treating hard-to-heal diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). The study included a 2-week run-in period, a 12-week treatment phase and a 4-week follow-up phase. The primary endpoint was complete wound closure at 12 weeks. Authors found that at the first analysis point, patients treated with FBADM were found to be significantly more likely to achieve complete wound closure compared with SOC alone (mITT: 45.6% versus 27.9% p=0.008; mPP: 59.5% versus 35.6% p=0.002). The difference in outcome yielded an odds ratio of 2.2 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.2, 3.9; p=0.008). Median time to closure within 12 weeks was 43 days for the FBADM group compared to 57 days for the SOC group (p=0.36). The median number of applications of FBADM to achieve closure was one. Authors concluded that in many cases a single application of FBADM in conjunction with SOC offers a safe, faster and more effective treatment of DFUs than SOC alone. Evidence can be considered of moderate certainty (level B) due to high risk of bias from lack of blinding of assessors, participants. Authors note that there is a patient selection bias, as the study population was likely to be healthier than the real-world patients with DFUs.
- A 2021 industry sponsored RCT (n=49 patients) [172] compared use of fish skin graft with standard of care (SOC) using collagen alginate dressing in the management of treatment-resistant diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs), defined as superficial ulcers not involving tendon capsule or bone. Patients with DFUs who were first treated with SOC (offloading, appropriate debridement, and moist wound care) for a 2-week screening period were then randomized to either receiving SOC alone or SOC plus fish skin graft applied weekly for up to 12 weeks. Both study arms received a once-weekly visit that included debridement, reapplication, and dressing change in the clinic; patients in the SOC arm were additionally allowed dressing changes at home, whether by themselves or a caregiver. The primary endpoint was the percentage of wounds closed at 12 weeks. At 12 weeks, 16 of 24 patients' DFUs (67%) in the fish skin arm were completely closed, compared with 8 of 25 patients' DFUs (32%) in the SOC arm (P value = .0152 [N = 49]; significant at P < .047). Authors concluded that the application of fish skin graft to previously nonresponsive DFUs resulted in significantly more fully healed wounds at 12 weeks than SOC alone. Evidence level for this RCT can be considered of low certainty due to small sample size (imprecision), lack of patient/ healthcare personnel binding, and sponsorship bias.
- A 2017 non industry sponsored RCT by Campitiello et al [231] (n=48 participants) evaluated use of flowable acellular matrix (Integra Flowable Matrix) on healing of Wagner 3 DFUs, compared with wet dressing. Complete DFU healing in the whole study population at 6 weeks was 69.56% (Integra Flowable Wound Matrix group, 86.95%, control group, 52.17%; p = 0.001). Amputation and rehospitalization rates were higher in the control group compared to the first group, therefore, the difference was statistically significant (p = 0.0019; p = 0.028, respectively). Evidence level for this RCT can be considered of low certainty due to small sample size (imprecision), lack of patient/ healthcare personnel/ assessor blinding, unclear randomization method, surrogate endpoint (short follow up of 6 weeks) (Evidence level C).
- A 2016 industry-sponsored RCT by Frykberg et al [174] (56 participants, partial report) analyzed the effectiveness of Matristem (acellular matrix derived from porcine urinary bladder) and Dermagraft (allogeneic matrix) in refractory DFU healing. Results show no difference in effectiveness so far. Evidence can be considered of low certainty so far due to small sample size and lack of participant/personnel blinding (evidence level C)
- A 2015 industry-sponsored large multi-centric RCT (307 participants) [170] compared use of Integra Dermal Regeneration Template (IDRT) with standard of care for the healing of refractory DFUs. Complete DFU closure during the treatment phase was significantly greater with IDRT treatment (51%) than control treatment (32%; p <0.001) at sixteen weeks. The median time to complete DFU closure was 43 days for IDRT subjects and 78 days for control subjects in wounds that healed. The rate of wound size reduction was 7.2% per week for IDRT subjects vs. 4.8% per week for control subjects (p < 0.012). Authors concluded that for the treatment of chronic DFUs, IDRT treatment decreased the time to complete wound closure, increased the rate of wound closure, improved components of quality of life and had less adverse events compared with the standard of care treatment. This RCT was published after authors of the 2016 Cochrane systematic review finalized literature review and thus was not included in the systematic review. Evidence level of this industry sponsored RCT can be considered of moderate certainty (level B), due to lack of blinding of patients and healthcare personnel.
Cost-effectiveness studies
- A 2017 industry-sponsored cost-effectiveness study by Guest et al [232] utilized a Markov model to estimate cost-effectiveness of DFUs treated with adjunctive Oasis or standard care alone in a 12 month period using Medicare data. Authors found that the use of adjunctive Oasis instead of standard care alone is expected to lead to a 42% increase in the number of ulcer-free months, 32% increase in the probability of healing, and concluded that Oasis is more cost-effective than standard of care in treating refractory DFUs
- A 2016 industry-sponsored, retrospective cost and effectiveness study (13,193 skin substitute treatment episodes) [168] compared the relative product cost and clinical outcomes of four skin substitutes used as adjunctive treatments for DFUs (Apligraf-HML, Dermagraft-HSL, OASIS-SIS, and MatriStem-UBM), as per 2011-2014 Medicare claims data. Both Matristem and Oasis are Acellular Matrices. The percentage of DFUs that healed at 90 days were: UBM 62%; SIS 63%; HML 58%; and HSL 58%. Medicare reimbursements for skin substitutes per DFU episode for UBM ($1435 in skin substitutes per episode) and SIS ($1901) appeared to be equivalent to each other. Both were less than HML ($5364) or HSL ($14,424) (p<0.0005 in all four tests). HML was less costly than HSL (p<0.0005). Analysis of the four skin-substitute types resulted in a demonstration that UBM and SIS were associated with both shorter DFU episode lengths and lower payer reimbursements than HML and HSL, while HML was less costly than HSL but equivalent in healing.
- In a 2015 cost-effectiveness study, Gilligan et at [158] utilized data from Landsman’s trial [173] and estimated the total costs for the treatment including the cost and average number of dressings, cost of office visits and medical assessment necessary for complete healing. On average, in the cost-effectiveness analysis, the predicted 12-week cost per diabetic foot ulcer was USD 2522 for OASIS® (less costly) and USD 3889 for treatment with Dermagraft®. Dressings were equally effective.
|
SOE - Cellular and/or Tissue Based Products: Synthetic Matrix(Back to text) Randomized controlled trials - A 2022 industry-sponsored RCT (n=40 patients) by Armstrong et al. [175] compared resorbable glass microfiber matrix (Mirragen; Advanced Wound Matrix [BBGFM]; ETS Wound Care, Rolla, Missouri) with a standard of care group (SOC, collagen alginate dressing) at 12 weeks to help promote healing of DFU Wagner 1. The result illustrated in the intent-to-treat analysis at 12 weeks showed that 70% (14/20) of the BBGFM-treated DFUs healed compared with 25% (5/20) treated with SOC alone (adjusted P = .006). Mean PAR at 12 weeks was 79% in the BBGFM group compared with 37% in the SOC group (adjusted P = .027). Mean change in neuropathic score between baseline and up to 12 weeks of treatment was 2.0 in the BBGFM group compared with -0.6 in the SOC group where positive improvement in scores are better (adjusted P = .008). The mean number of BBGFM applications was 6.0. Authors concluded that adding BBGFM to SOC significantly improved wound healing with no adverse events related to treatment compared with SOC alone. Subjects were withdrawn from study at 6 weeks if they were not responding to the intervention BBGFM and this resulted in censoring of outcomes. Evidence level of this industry sponsored RCT can be considered of low certainty (level C), due to lack of blinding of patients and healthcare personnel, small size, outcome selection bias and industry sponsorship.
|
SOE - Phototherapy (LLLT)
(Back to text)
Systematic Review
- A 2018 systematic review and meta-analysis [134] included 7 RCTs involving 194 participants. The results of meta-analysis showed that LLLT has emerged as a potential noninvasive treatment for DFUs, as LLLT was found to effectively reduce the ulcer area [weighted mean difference (WMD) 34.18, 95% confidence intervals (CI) 19.38–48.99, P < 0.00001], improve the complete healing rate [odds ratio (OR) 6.72, 95% CI 1.99–22.64, P = 0.002]. Qualitative analysis of the included RCTs found that LLLT also played a role in the treatment of DFUs through promoting rapid granulation formation and shortening ulcer closure time, as well as alleviating foot ulcer pain. None of the treatment-related adverse event was reported. Due to small sample size of the included RCTs and lack of blinding in the majority of RCTs, evidence can be considered of low certainty (evidence level C)
- A 2017 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [233] that included 8 RCTs (316 participants) evaluated the effectiveness of phototherapy as an adjunctive treatment to promote DFU healing. Meta-analysis of 4 RCTs (116 participants) [134] [234] [235] [236] indicated that participants receiving phototherapy may experience a greater proportion of wounds completely healed during follow-up compared with those receiving no phototherapy/placebo (64.5% for the phototherapy group versus 37.0% for the no phototherapy/placebo group; RR 1.57, 95% confidence interval 1.08 to 2.28; low-quality evidence, downgraded for study limitations and imprecision). 2 RCTs found no difference in adverse events between groups treated with phototherapy and placebo. Authors concluded that phototherapy, when compared to no phototherapy/placebo, may increase the proportion of wounds completely healed during follow-up and may reduce wound size in people with diabetes, but there was no evidence that phototherapy improves quality of life. Due to the small sample size and methodological flaws in the original trials, the quality of the evidence was low (evidence level C)
- A 2016 systematic review [237] included 4 of the studies included in the 2017 Cochrane Review and found that all reviewed RCTs demonstrated therapeutic outcomes with no adverse events using LLLT for treatment of DFU compared to placebo or control.
Randomized Controlled Trial
- A 2017 RCT by Mathur et al [238] (30 participants) compared DFUs treated with phototherapy (low-level laser therapy, or LLLT) with standard of care for the treatment of refractory non-infected DFUs (Meggitt-Wagner grade I). Authors found that after 2 weeks, the percentage ulcer area reduction was 37 ± 9% in the LLLT group and 15 ± 5.4% in the control group (p < 0.001). For ~75% of wounds of the treatment group, wound area reduction of 30-50% was observed. In contrast, for the control group, ~80% of wounds showed a wound area reduction of <20% on day 15. Authors concluded that LLLT is beneficial as an adjunct to conventional therapy in the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers. (evidence level C due to small sample size and surrogate end point)
|
SOE - Growth Factors
(Back to text)
Systematic Review:
- A 2015 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [178] assessed outcomes of 28 trials using 11 different growth factors predominantly used as topical agents including: platelet-derived wound healing formula, autologous growth factor, allogeneic platelet-derived growth factor, transforming growth factor beta 2, arginine-glycine-aspartic acid peptide matrix, recombinant human platelet-derived growth factor (becaplermin), recombinant human epidermal growth factor, recombinant human basic fibroblast growth factor, recombinant human vascular endothelial growth factor, recombinant human lactoferrin, and recombinant human acidic fibroblast growth factor. Overall, the quality of the trials was low with a high risk of bias. In a meta-analysis of 12 trials, the use of any growth factor compared with placebo or no growth factor significantly increased the number of participants with complete wound healing (53 versus 35 percent). The results were mainly based on platelet-derived wound healing formula (64 versus 26 percent, two trials, RR 2.45, 95% 1.27 to 4.74), and recombinant human platelet-derived growth factor (becaplermin) (48 versus 33 percent, five trials RR 1.47, 95% CI 1.23 to 1.76). No clear differences were apparent with respect to amputation rates, but only two trials were included in this analysis. Authors found evidence suggesting that growth factors may increase the likelihood that people will have complete healing of foot ulcers in people with diabetes. However, this conclusion is based on randomised clinical trials with high risk of systematic errors (bias). There is insufficient evidence from RCTs to recommend or refute the use of growth factors in treating diabetic foot ulcers.
Guidelines
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [87], 2016 Society for Vascular Surgery in association with American Podiatric Medical Association (SVS) [17], the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27] guidelines have different opinions regarding use of growth factors as adjunctive therapy to treat refractory DFUs. WHS does not recommend while SVS does.
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
WHS
|
SVS
|
For refractory DFUs, use of growth factors to promote DFU healing, including platelet-derived growth factors (PDGF), recombinant PDGF, epidermal growth factor, etc)
|
1CDo not use PDGF as first line therapy (Grade 1C)
|
Level I, against use of intervention
|
1BGrade 1B, in favor of using PDGF as an adjunctive therapy if DFU does not decrease in size by at least 50% after 4 weeks of standard of care
|
|
SOE - Growth Factors: Platelet-rich Plasma (PRP)
(Back to text)
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses
- A 2018 meta-analysis [239] included 15 RCTs with 829 patients were eligible for the present analysis. Compared with standard care/conventional treatment, PRP significantly improved the healing rate of DFUs (RR=1.39, 95% CI 1.29 to 1.50, P < 0.00001), shortened the healing time (MD= -9.18, 95% CI -11.32 to -7.05, P < 0.00001), reduced the incidence of infection (OR= 0.34, 95% CI 0.15 to 0.77, P = 0.009). Authors considered evidence of low to moderate certainty (C to B)
- A 2018 systematic review [240] included eleven articles (322 PRP subjects, 126 controls) that showed that healing rate was significantly faster with PRP application compared to controls (0.68 ± 0.56 cm 2 /wk vs 0.39±0.09cm 2/wk; P <0.001). There were significantly lower adverse effects reported with PRP application compared to controls. The authors conclude that the topical application of PRP for DFUs results in statistically superior healing rates compared to controls with lower complication rates. Authors of this review classified evidence level as C. The review was conducted prior to the publication of a large RCT in 2018 ([181]), and thus did not factor it in when classifying level of evidence.
- A 2016 Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis [180] included 2 RCTs [241][242] that analyzed the effectiveness of autologous platelet rich plasma (PRP) may increase the healing of foot ulcers in people with diabetes compared with standard care (with or without placebo) (RR 1.22, 95% CI 1.01 to 1.49; I2 = 0%, low quality evidence, 2 RCTs, 189 participants). PRP may improve the healing of foot ulcers associated with diabetes, but this conclusion is based on low quality evidence from two small RCTs. It is unclear whether PRP influences the healing of other chronic wounds.
Randomized controlled trials
- A 2018 RCT [181] (269 participants) compared DFU healing outcomes in patients with refractory DFUs treated with PRP (Leucopatch) and standard of care. In the LeucoPatch group, 45 (34%) of 132 ulcers healed within 20 weeks versus 29 (22%) of 134 ulcers in the standard care group (odds ratio 1·58, 96% CI 1·04-2·40; p=0·0235) by intention-to-treat analysis. Time to healing was shorter in the LeucoPatch group (p=0·0246) than in the standard care group. No difference in adverse events was seen between the groups. Authors concluded that the use of LeucoPatch is associated with significant enhancement of healing of hard-to-heal foot ulcers in people with diabetes. Evidence level B due to lack of participant and clinician blinding. Industry funded RCT.
- A 2017 RCT [243] included 56 patients of both sex from 18 to 80 years, with clean chronic diabetic foot ulcers divided into 2 equal groups. The first group was treated by antiseptic ointment dressing, and the second group was treated by autologous platelet gel. Statically significant increase in healing rate was found in the PRP-treated group, and complete healing was achieved in 86% of them in comparison to 68% of the control group at the end of 12 weeks. In the study group, rate of healing per week was greater during the first 8 weeks and starts to decline afterward. The use of platelet gel showed a lower rate of wound infection. Evidence level C due to small sample size, high/unclear risk of bias from lack of blinding of personnel/patient, no mentioning of how participants randomization and allocation were done
Guidelines
- The 2016 International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) [87], and the 2016 Wound Healing Society (WHS) [27] guidelines do not support the use of autologous platelet rich plasma as a first line therapy. WHS does not recommend use of platelet-rich plasma as an adjunctive therapy to promote DFU healing. WHS cites the 2016 Cochrane systematic review [180] to support its view against use of platelet-rich plasma, however the systematic review concludes that there is some evidence supporting its use to promote DFU healing (evidence level C).
Intervention
|
IWGDF
|
WHS
|
For refractory DFUs, use of autologous platelet-rich plasma
|
Do not use autologous platelet rich plasma as first line therapy (Grade 1C)
|
Level I, against use of intervention
|
|
SOE - Autologous stem cell therapy(Back to text)
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses - A 2022 meta-analysis included a total of 14 studies using mostly autologous stem cells, with 683 participants.[186] Among those, 10 were RCTs, 3 were controlled clinical studies, and 1 was a retrospective study. The meta-analysis showed that stem cell therapy was more effective than conventional therapy in terms of ulcer or wound healing rate [OR = 8.20 (5.33, 12.62)], improvement in lower extremity ischemia(new vessels) [OR = 16.48 (2.88, 94.18)], ABI [MD = 0.13 (0.04, 0.08)], TcO2[MD = 4.23 (1.82, 6.65)], pain-free walking distance [MD = 220.79 (82.10, 359.48)], and rest pain score [MD = − 1.94 (− 2.50, − 1.39)], while the amputation rate was significantly decreased [OR = 0.19 (0.10, 0.36)]. Authors concluded that this meta-analysis of the current studies has shown that stem cells are significantly more effective than traditional methods in the treatment of diabetic foot and can improve the quality of life of patients after treatment. However, there were several limitations of this meta-analysis, such as:
- The included studies did not distinguish stem cells from other types of somatic cells and included several types of autologous stem cells and somatic cells (2 used peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNCs), 2 used bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMMSCs), 3 used bone marrow-derived mononuclear cells (BMMNCs), 1 used bone marrow-enriched tissue repair cells (BMTRCs), 1 used CD133+ cells, 1 used micro-fragmented adipose tissue, 1 used human processed lipoaspirate cells, 1 used bone marrow-derived cells (BMDC), 1 used peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPCs), 1 used BMMNCs + PBPCs, and 2 used human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (HUCMSCs).
- Some of the included studies were of low quality, 4 were non-randomized controlled studies, and 3 RCTs did not describe specific methods for using blind methods for participants and implementers in detail, leading to combined conclusions
|