Edwards Katherine, Borthwick Alan, McCulloch Louise, Redmond Anthony, Pinedo-Villanueva Rafael, Prieto-Alhambra Daniel, Judge Andrew, Arden Nigel, Bowen Catherine
Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Highfield Campus Building 45, University Road, Southampton, Hampshire SO17 1BJ UK.
J Foot Ankle Res. 2017 Nov 22;10:51. doi: 10.1186/s13047-017-0232-3. eCollection 2017.
Research focusing on management of foot health has become more evident over the past decade, especially related to chronic conditions such as diabetes. The level of methodological rigour across this body of work however is varied and outputs do not appear to have been developed or translated into clinical practice. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the latest guidelines, standards of care and current recommendations relative to people with chronic conditions to ascertain the level of supporting evidence concerning the management of foot health.
A systematic search of electronic databases (Medline, Embase, Cinahl, Web of Science, SCOPUS and The Cochrane Library) for literature on recommendations for foot health management for people with chronic conditions was performed between 2000 and 2016 using predefined criteria. Data from the included publications was synthesised via template analysis, employing a thematic organisation and structure. The methodological quality of all included publications was appraised using the Appraisal for Research and Evaluation (AGREE II) instrument. A more in-depth analysis was carried out that specifically considered the levels of evidence that underpinned the strength of their recommendations concerning management of foot health.
The data collected revealed 166 publications in which the majority (102) were guidelines, standards of care or recommendations related to the treatment and management of diabetes. We noted a trend towards a systematic year on year increase in guidelines standards of care or recommendations related to the treatment and management of long term conditions other than diabetes over the past decade. The most common recommendation is for preventive care or assessments (e.g. vascular tests), followed by clinical interventions such as foot orthoses, foot ulcer care and foot health education. Methodological quality was spread across the range of AGREE II scores with 62 publications falling into the category of high quality (scores 6-7). The number of publications providing a recommendation in the context of a narrative but without an indication of the strength or quality of the underlying evidence was high (79 out of 166).
It is clear that evidence needs to be accelerated and in place to support the future of the Podiatry workforce. Whilst high level evidence for podiatry is currently low in quantity, the methodological quality is growing. Where levels of evidence have been given in in high quality guidelines, standards of care or recommendations, they also tend to be strong-moderate quality such that further strategically prioritised research, if performed, is likely to have an important impact in the field.
在过去十年中,关注足部健康管理的研究愈发明显,尤其是与糖尿病等慢性病相关的研究。然而,这一系列研究的方法严谨程度各不相同,其成果似乎尚未转化为临床实践。本系统综述的目的是评估与慢性病患者相关的最新指南、护理标准和当前建议,以确定足部健康管理方面的支持性证据水平。
在2000年至2016年间,使用预定义标准对电子数据库(Medline、Embase、Cinahl、Web of Science、SCOPUS和Cochrane图书馆)进行系统检索,以查找有关慢性病患者足部健康管理建议的文献。纳入出版物的数据通过模板分析进行综合,采用主题组织和结构。使用研究与评估评估工具(AGREE II)对所有纳入出版物的方法学质量进行评估。进行了更深入的分析,特别考虑了支持其足部健康管理建议强度的证据水平。
收集的数据显示有166篇出版物,其中大多数(102篇)是与糖尿病治疗和管理相关的指南、护理标准或建议。我们注意到,在过去十年中,与糖尿病以外的长期疾病治疗和管理相关的指南、护理标准或建议呈现出逐年系统性增加的趋势。最常见的建议是预防性护理或评估(如血管测试),其次是临床干预,如足部矫形器、足部溃疡护理和足部健康教育。方法学质量分布在AGREE II评分范围内,62篇出版物属于高质量类别(评分6 - 7)。在叙述中提供建议但未表明基础证据强度或质量的出版物数量很多(166篇中有79篇)。
显然,需要加快证据积累并使其到位,以支持足病学专业人员队伍的未来发展。虽然目前足病学的高水平证据数量较少,但方法学质量正在提高。在高质量指南、护理标准或建议中给出证据水平的情况下,这些证据往往也具有中等到较高的质量,因此,如果进行进一步的战略重点研究,可能会对该领域产生重要影响。