| Literature DB >> 22544222 |
J C Dumville1, M O Soares, S O'Meara, N Cullum.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Foot ulcers in people with diabetes are a common and serious global health issue. Dressings form a key part of ulcer treatment. Existing systematic reviews are limited by the lack of head-to-head comparisons of alternative dressings in a field where there are several different dressing options. We aimed to determine the relative effects of alternative wound dressings on the healing of diabetic foot ulcers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22544222 PMCID: PMC3369130 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-012-2558-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Fig. 1PRISMA overview of study identification and selection process
Fig. 2A network summary of all comparisons informed by direct trial data for wound dressings for diabetic foot ulcer healing. The lines link dressings that have been compared (in the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers) using a randomised controlled trial. (n=x) refers to the number of trials making this comparison. One three-arm trial was included that randomised to hydrocolloid (fibrous), iodine-impregnated and basic wound contact
Results from direct and MTC analysis with assessment of overall quality of evidence using the GRADE (direct) and iGRADE (MTC) quality of evidence scales
The treatment on the horizontal axis is always the reference treatment
Direct data are presented as ORs and 95% CrIs for meta-analysed data (indicated by a) and ORs and 95% CIs for non-pooled data (i.e. one trial). All MTC data are presented as ORs and 95% CrIs
In each cell, the left-hand value is the result of standard meta-analysis (using direct/head-to-head data only). The right-hand value is the MTC estimate (direct and/or indirect evidence).The shaded circles illustrate the assessed quality of evidence of estimates. Purple equates to very low quality evidence (VL); red equates to low evidence (L); yellow equates to moderate evidence (M) and green to high quality (H, none reported)
aMeta-analysed data
bComparisons where credibility intervals do not cross 1
cThree-arm trial
Grey-shaded areas denote reverse odds ratios to those presented (with dressings in column as reference), which were not calculated
Treatment rankings
Table 2 shows the probability that each treatment is the best in terms of healing diabetic foot ulcers, then the second best in terms of healing diabetic foot ulcers and so on. The shaded square highlights the treatment with the highest probability in each column.
aMust be interpreted with caution owing to the risk of bias in the research