| Literature DB >> 22136082 |
Lisa Matricciani1, Kerwin Talbot, Sara Jones.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective treatment of tinea pedis and onychomycosis is crucial for patients with diabetes as these infections may lead to foot ulcers and secondary bacterial infections resulting in eventual lower limb amputation. Although numerous studies have assessed the effectiveness of antifungal drug and treatment regimens, most exclude patients with diabetes and examine otherwise healthy individuals. While these studies are useful, results cannot necessarily be extrapolated to patients with diabetes. The purpose of this study was to therefore identify the best evidence-based treatment interventions for tinea pedis or onychomycosis in people with diabetes.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22136082 PMCID: PMC3248359 DOI: 10.1186/1757-1146-4-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Search strategy used for each database.
| Database | Date | Limitation | Search Terms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scopus | 15/10/10 | Abstract | ((ABS("Tinea Pedis" OR "onychomycosis" OR "athlete's foot"))) AND ((ABS(diab*)) AND (ABS(treat*)). |
| Ovid | 6/1/11 | Abstract | ((Tinea Pedis OR onychomycosis OR athlete's foot) and (treat$) and (diab$) |
| Web of Science | 6/1/11 | Topic | Topic = ("Tinea Pedis" OR "onychomycosis" OR "athlete's foot") AND Topic = (diab*) AND Topic = (treat*) |
| EbscoHost | 15/10/10 | Abstract | AB ("Tinea Pedis" OR "onychomycosis" OR "athlete's foot") and AB (diab*) and AB (treat*) |
NHMRC Hierarchy of evidence
| Level of evidence | Study design |
|---|---|
| I* | A systematic review of level II studies |
| II | A randomised controlled trial |
| III-1 | A pseudorandomised controlled trial |
| III-2 | A comparative study with concurrent controls |
| III-3 | A comparative study without concurrent controls |
| IV | Case series with either post-test or pre-test/post-test outcomes |
Levels of evidence for the AOTA Evidence-Based Practice Project
| Level | Definition |
|---|---|
| Design | |
| I | Randomized trial: Comparison of two or more groups or conditions in an experiment with random assignment to group or to sequence of conditions in a repeated-measures design |
| II | Non-RCT: Comparison of two or more groups or treatments in a quasi-experiment without randomization to group, condition, or sequence |
| III | Non-RCT: Comparison of one group pre- and post-treatment |
| IV | Single-subject design: One subject measured at intervals throughout an intervention |
| N | A Narratives and case studies |
| Sample size | |
| A | |
| B | |
| C | |
| Internal validity | |
| 1 | High internal validity: No strong alternate explanation for outcome |
| 2 | Moderate internal validity: No strong alternate explanation for outcome but one or two threats to validity exist |
| 3 | Low internal validity: Does not meet criteria for 1 or 2 |
| External validity | |
| a | High external validity: Participants represent population |
| b | b Moderate external validity: Has two of the criteria listed for a |
| Low external validity: Has one or fewer criteria listed for a | |
AOTA-American Occupational Therapy association; RCT-Randomised controlled trial. Figure taken from Tromblay and Ma [38]
Figure 1Modified flow chart of search strategy.
Summary of studies included for review
| Study | Design | Subjects | Age | Intervention | Assessment (weeks) | Outcome measures | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pollak [ | Case series | 77 (N/R) | N/R | 0, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 48, 72 | Participant and investigator-reported adverse events. Severity (mild, moderate, severe, life-threatening) and likelihood of adverse event related to treatment (yes, no, uncertain) determined by investigator | Not assessed | |
| Albreski | RCT | 52 (51) | 71.42 (6.21) years | 0, 2, 10, 32 | Investigator-reported adverse events and likelihood that any adverse events were related to drug therapy | Not assessed | |
| Brenner [ | Case series | 49 (36) | 63.8 (12.0)years | 0, 8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48 | Participant and investigator-reported adverse events. Severity and likelihood of adverse event related to treatment determined by investigator. | ||
| Farkas [ | Case series | 89 (47) | 55.7 (11.7) years | 0, 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48 | Self-reported adverse event (severity was scored as mild, moderate or severe) and the likelihood of any adverse events being related to the intervention (non, unlikely, possible, probably, certain) | ||
| Gupta [ | RCT | 70 (34) | 60.67 (1.52) years | 0, 1, 6, 12,24, 36, 48, 60, 72 | Self-reported adverse event and the likelihood of any adverse events being related to the intervention | ||
| Sadighha [ | Case series | 13 (N/R) | 50-73 years | 0, 26 | Not assessed | ||
RCT = Randomised controlled trial
N/R = not reported
all studies, except that by Farkas and colleagues [46] assessed people with Type 2 diabetes. Farkas and colleagues did not find any significant differences in the treatment outcomes for patients with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, the pooled results from this study were considered in this review
Appraisal of the validity of the studies included for review using the AOTA scale
| Study | Level of Evidence† | Sample size | Internal validity | Possible threats to internal validity | External validity | Possible threats to external validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pollak [ | IV | A | 2-Moderate | Unblinded | B-Moderate | |
| Albreski [ | II | B | 3-Low | Unblinded | B-Moderate | |
| Brenner [ | IV | B | 3-Low | Unblinded | B-Moderate | |
| Farkas [ | IV | A | 2-Moderate | Unblinded | A-High | nil |
| Gupta [ | II | B | 1-High | nil | A-High | nil |
| Sadighha [ | IV | C | 2-Moderate | Unblinded | B-Moderate |
For consistency, the NHMRC study design classification system was used instead of the AOTA study design classification system
PEDro scores for the RCTs included in this study
| Eligibility criteria specified | Random allocation | Concealed allocation | Baseline comparability | Blind subjects | Blind therapists | Blind assessors | Adequate follow-up | Intention to treat analysis | Between group comparisons | Point estimates and variability | PEDro Score (/11) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albreski [ | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | N | |
| Gupta [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N |
safety outcome results identified in studies included for review
| Study | Design | Treatment | Treatment regimen | Sample size (males) | Age | Safety assessment (week) | % of patients experienced to adverse events | % of patients experienced to adverse events due to treatment intervention | Reported adverse events likely to be related to treatment intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pollak [ | Case series | Terbinafine | 250 mg oral terbinafine once daily for 12 weeks† | 77 (N/R) | N/R | 6, 12,18, 24, 30, 36, 48, 72 | 61% (47/77) | 10.4% (8/77) | Gastrointestinal |
| Albreski [ | RCT | Itraconazole | 200 mg of oral itraconazole taken twice a day for the first week of three consecutive months | 27 (26) | 70.52 (7.99) | 32 | 15% (4/27) | 4% (1/27) | Elevated liver function test |
| Brenner [ | Case series | Ciclopirox 8% | Ciclopirox 8% nail lacquer applied daily to nail and 5 mm surrounding skin for 48 weeks. Nails care every 8 weeks. | 49(36) | 63.8 (12.0) | 48 | 44.9% (22/49) | 29% (14/49) | Toenail disorders and infection |
| Farkas [ | Case series | Terbinafine | 250 mg oral terbinafine once daily for 12 weeks. | 89 (47) | 55.7 (11.7) | 36 | 13.5% (12/89) | 7.9% (7/89) | Gastrointestinal disturbance, headache, change in taste sensation and |
| Gupta [ | RCT | Itraconazole | 200 mg of oral itraconazole taken twice a day for the first week of three consecutive months | 35 (16) | 57.77 (2.3) | 48 | Not reported | 8.6% (3/35) | Gastrointestinal |
RCT-Randomised controlled trial
N/R-Not reported
N/A-Not applicable
† According to Health Care Financing Administration [54] guidelines for 4 months.
Figure 2Studies that determined the efficacy of treatment interventions.
Summary of studies that examined the safety of treatment interventions for people with diabetes
| Study | Design | Subjects | Infection | Organism | Intervention | Assessment (week) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gupta [ | RCT | DLSO | Dermatophyte | 48 | ||
| Brenner [ | Case series | N = 49† | DSO†† | Not reported† | 48 | |
| Farkas [ | Case series | N = 89 | DSO | Dermatophyte (67.4%); moulds (5.6%); yeast (4.5%) | 48 | |
| Sadighha [ | Case series | N = 13 | DSO†† | Dermatophyte† | 26 | |
† Concomitant tinea pedis was present.
"DSO" = distal subungual onychomycosis; "DLSO" = distal lateral subungual onychomycosis
Study 4 is excluded from the graph because efficacy was not assessed at week 48 like the rest of the studies. Sadighha [41] found itraconazole achieved cure in 7.7% (1/13) of patients with diabetes at week 26