BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The appropriate medical approach to treat patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and critical limb ischemia (CLI) is still controversial. The goal of this study was to investigate the survival rate of ESRD patients with foot ulcers who underwent femoropopliteal bypass surgery versus patients who did not receive any major surgical interventions. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A 5-year Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of 99 ESRD subjects with foot ulcers, stage IV, recruited in the authors' single-center study between 1997 and 2005, was performed. 27 patients underwent bypass surgery because of meeting standard eligibility criteria for this procedure, and 72 patients received only conventional treatment due to their poorer vascular condition. Patients were censored upon major amputation during the observation period. Start of the observation was date of ulcer diagnosis. RESULTS: Survival rate was 16.2% (standard error [SE], 0.08) in the bypass group versus 18.6% (SE, 0.06) in the non-bypass group (p = 0.92; log-rank test). Median time to bypass surgery was 0.36 years (range, 0-2.65 years) after ulcer diagnosis. Six patients of 27 (22.2%) were censored due to major amputation in the bypass group versus 25 patients of 72 (34.7%) in the non-bypass group. CONCLUSION: These results may suggest that bypass surgery in ESRD patients with foot ulcers as treatment of CLI is not the appropriate surgical approach, since this procedure does not seem to cause a better survival than in patients who could not undergo revascularization surgery because of their poorer overall vascular condition.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The appropriate medical approach to treat patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and critical limb ischemia (CLI) is still controversial. The goal of this study was to investigate the survival rate of ESRDpatients with foot ulcers who underwent femoropopliteal bypass surgery versus patients who did not receive any major surgical interventions. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A 5-year Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of 99 ESRD subjects with foot ulcers, stage IV, recruited in the authors' single-center study between 1997 and 2005, was performed. 27 patients underwent bypass surgery because of meeting standard eligibility criteria for this procedure, and 72 patients received only conventional treatment due to their poorer vascular condition. Patients were censored upon major amputation during the observation period. Start of the observation was date of ulcer diagnosis. RESULTS: Survival rate was 16.2% (standard error [SE], 0.08) in the bypass group versus 18.6% (SE, 0.06) in the non-bypass group (p = 0.92; log-rank test). Median time to bypass surgery was 0.36 years (range, 0-2.65 years) after ulcer diagnosis. Six patients of 27 (22.2%) were censored due to major amputation in the bypass group versus 25 patients of 72 (34.7%) in the non-bypass group. CONCLUSION: These results may suggest that bypass surgery in ESRDpatients with foot ulcers as treatment of CLI is not the appropriate surgical approach, since this procedure does not seem to cause a better survival than in patients who could not undergo revascularization surgery because of their poorer overall vascular condition.