Chuter Vivienne, Schaper Nicolaas, Hinchliffe Robert, Mills Joseph, Azuma Nobuyoshi, Behrendt Christian-Alexander, Boyko Edward J, Conte Michael S, Humphries Misty, Kirksey Lee, McGinigle Katharine C, Nikol Sigrid, Nordanstig Joakim, Rowe Vincent, David Russell, van den Berg Jos C, Venermo Maarit, Fitridge Robert
School of Health Sciences, Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, Sydney, Australia.
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, MUMC+, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Diabetes Metab Res Rev. 2024 Mar;40(3):e3701. doi: 10.1002/dmrr.3701. Epub 2023 Jul 26.
The presence of peripheral artery disease (PAD) confers a significantly increased risk of failure to heal and major lower limb amputation for people with diabetes-related foot ulcer (DFU). Determining performance of non-invasive bedside tests for predicting likely DFU outcomes is therefore key to effective risk stratification of patients with DFU and PAD to guide management decisions. The aim of this systematic review was to determine the performance of non-invasive bedside tests for PAD to predict DFU healing, healing post-minor amputation, or need for minor or major amputation in people with diabetes and DFU or gangrene.
A database search of Medline and Embase was conducted from 1980 to 30 November 2022. Prospective studies that evaluated non-invasive bedside tests in patients with diabetes, with and without PAD and foot ulceration or gangrene to predict the outcomes of DFU healing, minor amputation, and major amputation with or without revascularisation, were eligible. Included studies were required to have a minimum 6-month follow-up period and report adequate data to calculate the positive likelihood ratio (PLR) and negative likelihood ratio for the outcomes of DFU healing, and minor and major amputation. Methodological quality was assessed using the Quality in Prognosis Studies tool.
From 14,820 abstracts screened 28 prognostic studies met the inclusion criteria. The prognostic tests evaluated by the studies included: ankle-brachial index (ABI) in 9 studies; ankle pressures in 10 studies, toe-brachial index in 4 studies, toe pressure in 9 studies, transcutaneous oxygen pressure (TcPO ) in 7 studies, skin perfusion pressure in 5 studies, continuous wave Doppler (pedal waveforms) in 2 studies, pedal pulses in 3 studies, and ankle peak systolic velocity in 1 study. Study quality was variable. Common reasons for studies having a moderate or high risk of bias were poorly described study participation, attrition rates, and inadequate adjustment for confounders. In people with DFU, toe pressure ≥30 mmHg, TcPO ≥25 mmHg, and skin perfusion pressure of ≥40 mmHg were associated with a moderate to large increase in pretest probability of healing in people with DFU. Toe pressure ≥30 mmHg was associated with a moderate increase in healing post-minor amputation. An ABI using a threshold of ≥0.9 did not increase the pretest probability of DFU healing, whereas an ABI <0.5 was associated with a moderate increase in pretest probability of non-healing. Few studies investigated amputation outcomes. An ABI <0.4 demonstrated the largest increase in pretest probability of a major amputation (PLR ≥10).
Prognostic capacity of bedside testing for DFU healing and amputation is variable. A toe pressure ≥30 mmHg, TcPO ≥25 mmHg, and skin perfusion pressure of ≥40 mmHg are associated with a moderate to large increase in pretest probability of healing in people with DFU. There are little data available evaluating the prognostic capacity of bedside testing for healing after minor amputation or for major amputation in people with DFU. Current evidence suggests that an ABI <0.4 may be associated with a large increase in risk of major amputation. The findings of this systematic review need to be interpreted in the context of limitations of available evidence, including varying rates of revascularisation, lack of post-revascularisation bedside testing, and heterogenous subpopulations.
外周动脉疾病(PAD)的存在会显著增加糖尿病相关足部溃疡(DFU)患者愈合失败和下肢大截肢的风险。因此,确定用于预测DFU可能结局的非侵入性床边检查的性能,是对DFU和PAD患者进行有效风险分层以指导管理决策的关键。本系统评价的目的是确定用于PAD的非侵入性床边检查在预测糖尿病合并DFU或坏疽患者的DFU愈合、小截肢后愈合或小截肢或大截肢需求方面的性能。
对1980年至2022年11月30日期间的Medline和Embase数据库进行检索。纳入评价糖尿病患者(无论是否合并PAD以及足部溃疡或坏疽)的非侵入性床边检查以预测DFU愈合、小截肢和大截肢(无论是否进行血运重建)结局的前瞻性研究。纳入研究需有至少6个月的随访期,并报告足够的数据以计算DFU愈合、小截肢和大截肢结局的阳性似然比(PLR)和阴性似然比。使用预后研究质量工具评估方法学质量。
在筛选的14820篇摘要中,28项预后研究符合纳入标准。这些研究评估的预后检查包括:9项研究中的踝肱指数(ABI);10项研究中的踝压;4项研究中的趾肱指数;9项研究中的趾压;7项研究中的经皮氧分压(TcPO₂);5项研究中的皮肤灌注压;2项研究中的连续波多普勒(足部波形);3项研究中的足部脉搏;以及1项研究中的踝部收缩期峰值速度。研究质量参差不齐。研究存在中度或高度偏倚风险的常见原因包括研究参与情况描述不佳、失访率以及对混杂因素的调整不足。在DFU患者中,趾压≥30 mmHg、TcPO₂≥25 mmHg以及皮肤灌注压≥40 mmHg与DFU患者愈合的验前概率适度至大幅增加相关。趾压≥30 mmHg与小截肢后愈合的适度增加相关。使用≥0.9的阈值的ABI并未增加DFU愈合的验前概率,而ABI<0.5与不愈合的验前概率适度增加相关。很少有研究调查截肢结局。ABI<0.4显示大截肢的验前概率增加最大(PLR≥10)。
床边检查对DFU愈合和截肢的预后能力各不相同。趾压≥30 mmHg、TcPO₂≥25 mmHg以及皮肤灌注压≥40 mmHg与DFU患者愈合的验前概率适度至大幅增加相关。评估床边检查对DFU患者小截肢后愈合或大截肢的预后能力的数据很少。当前证据表明ABI<0.4可能与大截肢风险大幅增加相关。本系统评价的结果需要在现有证据的局限性背景下进行解读,包括血运重建率不同、缺乏血运重建后床边检查以及异质性亚组。