Frykberg Robert G, Marston William A, Cardinal Matthew
Robert G. Frykberg, DPM, MPH, is Chief of Podiatry and Residency Director, Phoenix VA Healthcare System, Phoenix, Arizona. William A. Marston, MD, is Medical Director, Department of Surgery, Division of Vascular Surgery, University of North Carolina Wound Healing Center, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Matthew Cardinal, MS, is Clinical Research Scientist, Novartis Vaccines & Diagnostics, Boston, Massachusetts. Dr Frykberg has disclosed that he has received research funding from Shire Regenerative Medicine, a previous manufacturer of Dermagraft, and previously received honoraria for lectures on diabetic foot ulcers from Shire Regenerative Medicine. Dr Marston has disclosed that he has served as a scientific consultant to Shire Regenerative Medicine. Mr Cardinal has disclosed that he was an employee of Shire Regenerative Medicine at the time the manuscript was developed. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and neither those of the Department of Veterans Health Affairs, nor the US Government. Shire Regenerative Medicine provided technical writing support in the development of this manuscript. An abstract of this work was presented at the Wound Healing Society's annual meeting April 20, 2012. Abstract citation: Frykberg RG, Marston WA, Cardinal M. Wound Rep Reg 2012;20:A23.
Adv Skin Wound Care. 2015 Jan;28(1):17-20. doi: 10.1097/01.ASW.0000456630.12766.e9.
Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are frequently recalcitrant and at risk for infection, which may lead to lower-extremity amputation or bone resection. Reporting the incidence of amputations/bone resections may shed light on the relationship of ulcer healing to serious complications. This study aimed to evaluate the incidence of amputations/bone resections in a randomized controlled trial comparing human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute plus conventional care with conventional care alone for the treatment of DFUs.
Ulcer-related amputation/bone resection data were extracted from data on all adverse events reported for the intent-to-treat population (N = 314), and amputations were categorized by type: below the knee, Syme, Chopart, transmetatarsal, ray, toe, or partial toe. Data were analyzed retrospectively for the incidence of amputation/bone resection by treatment.
Randomized controlled trial.
Patients with full-thickness DFUs greater than 6 weeks' duration.
Standard wound care plus human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute versus standard wound care alone.
The incidence of amputation/bone resection in the study was 8.9% (28/314) overall, 5.5% (9/163) for patients receiving human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute, and 12.6% (19/151) for patients receiving conventional care (P = .031). Of the 28 cases of amputation/bone resection, 27 were preceded by ulcer-related infection.
There were significantly fewer amputations/bone resections in patients who received human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute versus conventional care, likely related to the lower incidence of infection adverse events observed in the human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute treatment group.
糖尿病足溃疡(DFUs)常常难以愈合且有感染风险,这可能导致下肢截肢或骨切除。报告截肢/骨切除的发生率可能有助于了解溃疡愈合与严重并发症之间的关系。本研究旨在评估在一项随机对照试验中,比较人成纤维细胞来源的真皮替代物加传统护理与单纯传统护理治疗DFUs时截肢/骨切除的发生率。
从意向性治疗人群(N = 314)报告的所有不良事件数据中提取溃疡相关的截肢/骨切除数据,并按类型对截肢进行分类:膝下、赛姆截肢、乔帕特截肢、经跖骨截肢、射线截肢、趾截肢或部分趾截肢。回顾性分析治疗组截肢/骨切除的发生率。
随机对照试验。
全层DFUs病程超过6周的患者。
标准伤口护理加人成纤维细胞来源的真皮替代物与单纯标准伤口护理。
研究中截肢/骨切除的总体发生率为8.9%(28/314),接受人成纤维细胞来源真皮替代物的患者为5.5%(9/163),接受传统护理的患者为12.6%(19/151)(P = 0.031)。在28例截肢/骨切除病例中,27例之前存在溃疡相关感染。
与传统护理相比,接受人成纤维细胞来源真皮替代物治疗的患者截肢/骨切除明显更少,这可能与在人成纤维细胞来源真皮替代物治疗组中观察到的感染不良事件发生率较低有关。