| Literature DB >> 26279683 |
Pauline Fitzgerald1, Heidi J Siddle2, Michael R Backhouse3, E Andrea Nelson4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of foot ulcers in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has been reported at almost 10 %. These foot ulcers often occur at multiple sites and are reoccurring, with the potential risk of infection increased due to RA diagnosis and disease modifying medications. The objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence of clinical infection in foot-ulcers of patients with RA; describe the microbiological characteristics and investigate risk factors.Entities:
Keywords: Foot ulcer; Infection; Rheumatoid arthritis; Wound swab
Year: 2015 PMID: 26279683 PMCID: PMC4537588 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-015-0099-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Fig. 1Flow Chart. Flow Chart to identify the eight patients with RA included in the analysis
Patients diagnosed with RA, had foot ulcers present in the study period and had swabs taken. [Swab group]
| Study Number | Agea in years | Gender | Disease Durationain years | Diabetes | CTD | CVD /PVD | Smoker Y/N | DAS:28 [within 4 weeks of index swab] | Standard DMARD therapy | Anti – TNF therapy | Other biologic therapy | Steroid therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 82 | F | N/A | N | N | Y | Y current | N/A | N | N | N | N |
| 2 | 67 | M | 28 | N | N | Y | N | N/A | Y | N | Y | Y |
| 3 | 78 | F | 17 | N | N | N | N | N/A | Y | N | N | N |
| 4 | 85 | M | 26 | Y | N | Y | N | N/A | N | N | N | N |
| 5 | 67 | M | 15 | N | N | Y | N previous | N/A | Y | N | N | Y |
| 6 | 72 | F | 30 | N | N | N | N previous | N/A | Y | N | Y | N |
| 7 | 71 | M | 25 | Y | N | Y | N previous | N/A | Y | N | N | N |
| 8 | 76 | F | 13 | N | N | Y | Y current | N/A | Y | N | Y | N |
| Mean: 74.75 | F = 4 | Mean: 22 | Y = 2 | Y = 0 | Y = 6 | N = 6 | No scores in notes. | N = 2 | N = 8 | N = 5 | N = 6 | |
| Median:74 | M = 4 | Median:25 | N = 6 | N = 8 | N = 2 | Y = 2 | Y = 6 | Y = 0 | Y = 3 | Y = 2 |
CTD connective tissue disease, CVD/PVD cardiovascular / peripheral vascular disease, N/A indicates missing data; Y yes, N no; F female, M male
arelates to index swab date
Comparison Group: RA patients with foot-ulcer but no swabs taken during study period or in the year before first attendance at the foot ulcer clinic
| Agea in years | Gender | Disease Durationa in years |
|---|---|---|
| 84 | F | 14 |
| 71 | F | 22 |
| 80 | F | 7 |
| 77 | F | 8 |
| 61 | F | 51 |
| 84 | M | 27 |
| 79 | M | 10 |
| 87 | F | 27 |
| 81 | F | 49 |
| 74 | F | 15 |
| 78 | F | N/A |
| 67 | M | 18 |
| 82 | F | 62 |
| 44 | M | 1 |
| 73 | M | 32 |
| 72 | F | 20 |
| 75 | F | 21 |
| 73 | M | 36 |
| 73 | F | 4 |
| 50 | F | 20 |
| Mean: 73.25 | F = 14 | Mean: 23.3 |
| Median:74 | M = 6 | Median: 20 |
N/A indicates missing data, F female, M male
aIndicates at first clinic attendance during study period
Microbiology Information collected from the patients with RA, had foot ulcers present in the study period and had swabs taken [swab group]
| Study No. | Location of Ulcer | Clinical Picture | Microscopy Culture result | Sensitivity detected | Treatments/antibiotics used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Right 2nd toe | Thick yellow pus type exudate coming from original ulcer and on exit wound of lateral border of apex. Same toe. Unable to probe as very painful. | Skin flora ++ | Non specified | Co-Amoxiclav. |
| 10 weeks prescribed but only completed 3 weeks due to side effects. | |||||
| Swabs from before the index swab: | |||||
| 41 days before: scanty skin flora | |||||
| 39 days before: skin flora + | |||||
| X-ray 3 months before index swab showed osteomyelitis. | |||||
| Antibiotics before index swab: | |||||
| Bone removed 7 days after index swab for culture. | |||||
| 39 days before: Flucloxacillin | |||||
| 41 days before: nil antibiotics | |||||
| 2 | Left medial malleolus. | Granular spreading infection – lot of exudate and spreading to deep tissue – probing more than 10 mm. X-ray taken. | Swab rejected from microbiology as no location/no Consultant specified. | N/A | Flucloxacillin |
| 15 days before index swab: wound clean, a granular base with no evidence of infection. 4 mm x 4 mm. | |||||
| 3 | Plantar aspect of right 1st toe, IP joint. | Index swab taken at start of ulcer. | Mixed skin and enteric flora +++ | Non specified | Clarithromycin |
| Ulcer dressed by district nurse before referral to podiatry 107 days later. | |||||
| 4 | Right 3rd plantar, MTP joint. | Foot ulcer swab. | Skin flora ++ with anaerobe ++ | Non specified | Flucloxacillin |
| 5 | Left 4th IP joint. | Probe depth to bone. No clinical signs of infection. | Skin flora + with anaerobe + | Metronidazole | None listed. |
| 6 | Left 2nd and 3rd toes. | Ulcer | Staphylococcus aureus +++. | Flucloxacillin sensitive | Flucloxacillin |
| Documented as: May represent colonisation only. Suggest treat only if current clinical evidence of infection. | Penicillin Resistant | ||||
| Clarith/Eryth Sensitive. | |||||
| 7 | Plantar lesion right hallux. 1st MTP joint. | Deep ulcer under right hallux. Probing to bone. Aspirated bursa fluid sent to microbiology. | Gram stain: no organisms seen | Non specified | None |
| Gram WBC: none seen | |||||
| These samples are not routinely examined for crystals. | |||||
| Culture: no growth | |||||
| 8 | Left big toe. | Infected rheumatoid nodule. | Skin flora ++ with anaerobe ++ | Non specified | None stated |
| May represent colonisation only. | |||||
| Skin flora + with Anaerobe ++ | |||||
| 14 days after index swab: RA infected Left big toe | Sensitive to Metronidazole | Flucloxacillin |
The patient study numbers correlate with those in Table 1
MTP metatarsophalangeal, IP interphalangeal, N/A not applicable