Literature DB >> 28458556

Evaluation of negative-pressure wound therapy for patients with diabetic foot ulcers: systematic review and meta-analysis.

Si Liu1, Chao-Zhu He1, Yan-Ting Cai1, Qiu-Ping Xing1, Ying-Zhen Guo1, Zhi-Long Chen1, Ji-Liang Su1, Li-Ping Yang2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to perform an updated systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the clinical efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness of negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT) in the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs).
METHODS: We searched the Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Ovid, and Chinese Biological Medicine databases up to June 30, 2016. We also manually searched the articles from reference lists of the retrieved articles, which used the NPWT system in studies of vacuum-assisted closure therapy. Studies were identified and selected, and two independent reviewers extracted data from the studies.
RESULTS: A total of eleven randomized controlled trials, which included a total of 1,044 patients, were selected from 691 identified studies. Compared with standard dressing changes, NPWT had a higher rate of complete healing of ulcers (relative risk, 1.48; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.24-1.76; P<0.001), shorter healing time (mean difference, -8.07; 95% CI: -13.70- -2.45; P=0.005), greater reduction in ulcer area (mean difference, 12.18; 95% CI: 8.50-15.86; P<0.00001), greater reduction in ulcer depth (mean difference, 40.82; 95% CI: 35.97-45.67; P<0.00001), fewer amputations (relative risk, 0.31; 95% CI: 0.15-0.62; P=0.001), and no effect on the incidence of treatment-related adverse effects (relative risk, 1.12; 95% CI: 0.66-1.89; P=0.68). Meanwhile, many analyses showed that the NPWT was more cost-effective than standard dressing changes.
CONCLUSION: These results indicate that NPWT is efficacious, safe, and cost-effective in treating DFUs.

Entities:  

Keywords:  amputation; complete wound closure; cost-effectiveness; diabetic foot ulcers; meta-analysis; negative-pressure wound therapy

Year:  2017        PMID: 28458556      PMCID: PMC5403129          DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S131193

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ther Clin Risk Manag        ISSN: 1176-6336            Impact factor:   2.423


Introduction

Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a syndrome characterized by hyperglycemia that results from absolute or relative impairment in insulin secretion and/or insulin action.1 With the development of people’s living standards and lifestyle changes, the incidence of diabetes has been rising. An estimated 382 million people had DM in 2013; this number will increase to 592 million by 2035.2 Hazards of DM usually present as complications; diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are considered one of the most common and devastating chronic complications of diabetes because they contribute to high morbidity, high hospitalization rates, and high mortality, all of which seriously threaten the quality of life of DM patients. The expected lifetime risk of a DM patient developing a foot ulcer is 12%–25%,3 with a 50%–70% recurrence rate over the ensuing 5 years. As a consequence of DFUs, a lower limb is lost every 30 seconds somewhere in the world, and the probability of losing the other leg is 50% after 3 years. DFUs contribute to 85% of non-traumatic, lower-extremity amputations and lead to a 13%–17% mortality rate in patients with DM.4,5 In comparison to non-DFU patients, DFU patients have more days of hospitalization and more days requiring home health care, emergency department visits, and outpatient/physician office visits.6 Meanwhile, the cost of treating DFUs for complete healing and transtibial amputation ranges from US$3,959 to US$188,645 in the US.7 These numbers indicate that DFUs also impose a substantial burden on public and private payers. The standard of care for DFUs involves debridement, local wound care, infection control, and off-loading of pressure. Various treatments advocated in recent years include advanced wound dressings, growth factors, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, cultured skin substitutes, and other wound therapies. Negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is a newer, noninvasive adjunctive therapy system. A vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) device to control sub-atmospheric pressure helps promote wound healing by removing fluid from open wounds, preparing the wound bed for closure, reducing edema, and promoting formation and perfusion of granulation tissue.8 Some clinical evidence has suggested that NPWT is an effective and safe method for promoting diabetic foot wounds’ healing,9,10 but some serious complications related to NPWT have been reported in recent years.11 It is also worth noting that NPWT appears to be more expensive than conventional methods in the treatment of DFUs. Some of the previous literature focused on one or a few of the several factors of NWPT for DFUs such as evaluating efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness, but almost never evaluating all of them at the same time. The aim of this study was to perform an updated systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the clinical efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness of NPWT in the treatment of DFUs, and to strengthen the evidence to support recommendations regarding the use of NPWT in DFU patients.

Methods

We conducted a systematic review, using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) checklist.

Search strategy

We searched the Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Ovid, and Chinese Biological Medicine databases (up to June 30, 2016) to identify relevant reports of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and manually searched articles from reference lists of retrieved articles to assemble a comprehensive collection of RCTs about NPWT in the treatment of DFUs. The search terms used were “diabetic foot”, “diabetic feet”, “foot ulcer, diabetic”, “foot, diabetic”, “feet, diabetic”, “negative pressure wound therapy”, “negative-pressure wound therapies”, “vacuum assisted closure”, “vacuum-assisted closure”, “topical negative pressure therapy”, “negative pressure dressings”, “VAC”, and “NPWT” (Supplementary material).

Selection criteria

Inclusion criteria were as follows: 1) RCTs comparing NPWT (VAC) with standard dressing changes in diabetic patients; 2) diabetic patients with chronic foot ulcers and surgical foot wounds; 3) English and Chinese publication languages only; 4) diabetic patients with chronic foot ulcers and surgical foot wounds regardless of pathogenesis; 5) NPWT, whether modified or commercial negative pressure devices, compared with standard dressing changes such as various advanced wound dressings and conventional moist gauze; 6) final indicators, in which the primary outcome is the rate of complete ulcer healing and complete wound closure defined as 100% re-epithelialization without drainage or dressing requirements, and the secondary outcomes included ulcer healing time, change in ulcer size, granulation tissue formation, quality of life, patient satisfaction, resource use, amputation rate, and treatment-related adverse effects (edema, infection, pain, bleeding). Exclusion criteria were as follows: 1) no RCT was performed; 2) NPWT (VAC) was not compared with standard dressing changes; 3) the study did not show corresponding outcomes.

Quality assessment and data collection

Two reviewers (Si Liu, Chao-zhu He) independently assessed the quality of each included study and extracted relevant data; differing opinions were resolved through discussion or a third reviewer’s judgment. The reviewers extracted the following information from every included RCT: first author; publication year; study design and size; demographic characteristics of participants; ulcer size, location, and severity; specific implementation of intervention measures (intervention settings, intervention time, the feature of VAC, and details of treatment received by each group); and final indicator measures. We assessed the quality of each included study using the Cochrane Collaboration tool for assessing risk of bias.12 This tool addressed six domains including selection bias, performance bias, detection bias, attrition bias, reporting bias, and other bias.

Statistical analysis

We assessed all data using Revman 5.3 software. First, we conducted the chi-square test to determine whether there was heterogeneity among the studies. A result of P>0.1, I2,50% indicated no significant heterogeneity between studies; in this case, we used the fixed-effects model for analysis. However, if P<0.1, I2≥50% and in the absence of clinical heterogeneity, we chose the random-effects model. If P<0.1 and we were unable to judge the source of heterogeneity, we used descriptive analysis. We calculated a weighted mean difference (WMD) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for continuous variables and calculated the relative risk (RR) and 95% CI for dichotomous variables. We considered a two-sided P whose value is less than 0.05 to indicate statistical significance. Sensitivity analysis was performed for reduction of DFU area based on the leave-one-out approach.

Results

Characteristics of studies and assessment

We retrieved 691 records through database searches. After removing duplicates, we found 587 articles, 549 of which we excluded by reviewing the title and abstract using general criteria, and assessed 37 full-text articles for eligibility. We then excluded 27 studies for the following reasons: did not meet inclusion criteria (n=4); merely a study protocol (n=1); merely a case report (n=1); they were review articles (n=7); they were not an RCT (n=10); they did not describe diabetic wounds on the foot only (n=4). One article was obtained from a reference list of a retrieved record. We subjected the resulting eleven articles to meta-analysis.13–23 Figure 1 shows the specific flow chart. For reasons for final exclusion of 27 studies, see Supplementary material.
Figure 1

Flow diagram for identification of studies for inclusion in meta-analysis.

Abbreviation: RCT, randomized controlled trial.

Tables 1 and 2 summarize the details of the eleven studies. The eleven RCTs included 1,044 patients. The number of patients in each included article ranged from ten to 342, the mean ages ranged from 50.2 to 66.5, and the intervention time ranged from 14 to 112 days. We evaluated the quality of the included RCTs according to the Cochrane reviewers’ handbook.12 For the included studies, seven of the eleven published articles13–15,17,18,22,23 (63.6%) described specific randomized methods and processes; we judged one report21 to be at high risk of bias for this domain because of randomization based on the date of admission. Three articles13,14,18 (27%) reported allocation concealment methods. Two articles17,21 employed different treatments according to the odevity of case number and date of admission, so we judged them as being at high risk of bias for the allocation concealment domain. It was difficult to achieve a blinded study of participants and personnel in NPWT, but un-blinded health professionals were able to make decisions about closure surgery that could then have resulted in more wound closure or amputation in one group than in the other,24 so we classified the risk of bias in this part as unclear. Six articles13,14,16,17,21,22 explained the specific tools used for image processing and analysis and had the corresponding data; thus, we may conclude that the outcome assessment was based on the blinded method. Other studies did not contain enough details for us to make a judgment for this domain, so we also judged their risk as unclear. We classified only one study18 as having a low risk of bias, because a group independent from the research team, masked the assigned treatment and evaluated the percentage of granulation tissue formation. Five articles13,17–19,23 provided information on the loss of cases and the reasons why participants withdrew; another article also provided that information, but the number of cases lost from the experimental and control groups was not clear. Two articles19,20 showed some results that had not previously been mentioned, so it was thought to have a risk of publication bias. All studies showed that the baseline data for the experimental group and the control group were comparable. Figures 2 and 3 show the risk of bias in the included studies (details in Supplementary material).
Table 1

Characteristics of participants in included studies

Author and yearStudy designStudy sizeMean age (years)ABI (mmHg)BMI (kg/m2)Duration of DM (years)Size of ulcers (cm2)Location of ulcersSeverity of ulcersUlcers’ duration
Armstrong and Lavery, 200513RCT16257.2±13.4/60.1±12.21.1±0.20/1.1±0.1930.8±7.8/31.4±9.4Not mentioned22.3±23.4/19.2±17.6Foot amputationUniversity of Texas grade 2 or 3 in depth1.2±3.9/1.8±5.9 months
Blume et al, 200814RCT34258±12/59±121.0±0.2/1.0±0.2kg: 99.2±25.1/93.8±25.6Not mentioned13.5±18.2/11.1±2.7Calcaneal dorsal or plantar foot ulcerWagner’s scale grade 2 or 3198.3±323.5/206.03±65.9 days
Karatepe et al, 201115RCT6768.5±11.1/66.3±12.6Not clearkg: 62.8±14.5/62.1±14.411.3±9.2/9.3±7.635.7±6.4/29.7±5.2Not mentionedNot mentioned11.3±9.2/8.8± 7.2 weeks
Eginton et al, 200316RCT10Not mentionedNot mentionedNot mentionedNot mentionedLength: 7.7±1.6 cm width: 3.5±0.6 cmSignificant soft tissue defectNot mentioned≥1 month
Sun and Sun, 200717RCT3866.50.7≤ ABI ≤1.2Not mentionedNot mentioned24.5±1.4Not mentionedUniversity of Texas grade 2 or 3 in depth≥1 month
Sepúlveda et al, 200918RCT2461.5±10/62.1±81.05±0.5/1.16±0.628.1±4/26.6±4Not mentioned168.0±8/169.6±6Transmetatarsal amputation wound of two or more contiguous toes or the first toeNot clearNot clear
Vaidhya et al, 201519RCT6056.5Not mentionedNot mentionedNot mentionedSize >10 cm2Dorsum of footNot mentionedNot clear
Nain et al, 201120RCT3061.33±7.63/55.40±11.54Not mentionedNot mentionedNot mentioned50–200 cm2Not clearNot mentionedNot clear
Ravari et al, 201321RCT23Not mentionedNot mentionedNot mentionedNot mentionedUlcer area:39.5/36.9 cm2Depth: 19/17 cmRight footLeft footBilateral fingersWagner’s scale grade 1 to 4≥1 month
Sajid et al, 201522RCT27856.83±11.3/55.88±10.97Not mentionedNot mentioned15.96±5.79/15.65±4.8615.09±2.81/15.07±2.92Calcaneal dorsal or plantar foot ulcerMajority of patients had Wagner’s grade 2 ulcerNot mentioned
McCallon et al, 200023RCT1055.4±12.8/50.2±8.7Not mentionedNot mentionedNot mentionedNot clearForefoot, mid-footNot clear≥1 month

Note: Data presented as mean ± standard deviation.

Abbreviations: RCT, randomized controlled trial; ABI, ankle brachial index; BMI, body mass index; DM, diabetes mellitus.

Table 2

Specific implementation of intervention measures

Author and yearIntervention settingIntervention size (EG/CG)Follow-up timeIntervention measuresThe feature of VACEvaluation timeOutcome indicatorsITT analysisFunding
Armstrong and Lavery, 200513Undertaken in wound and academic centers in the US77/85112 daysVAC (KCI)/standard moist wound careVAC system; dressings changed every 48 hEvaluated at 0, 7, 14, 28, 42, 56, 84, and 112 daysA, B, C, D, EYesFunded by KCI Manufacturing
Blume et al, 200814Undertaken in the US169/166112 daysVAC (KCI)/advanced moist wound therapyNegative pressure ranging from 50 to 200 mmHgExamined weekly for the first 4 weeks then every other week until day 112 or ulcer closureA, C, D, EYesFunded by KCI Manufacturing
Karatepe et al, 201115Undertaken in a Turkish hospital30/37Not mentionedVAC (no details)/conventional wound care treatmentVAC (no details)Not mentionedI, JNoNot reported
Eginton et al, 200316Undertaken in a US hospital and medical center5/52 weeksVAC (no details)/conventional moist dressings125 mmHg continuous negative pressure; dressings changed three times a week or more if neededEvaluated weeklyK, LNoNot funded
Sun and Sun, 200717Undertaken in the Changhai Hospital, Second Military Medical University of Chinese People’s Liberation Army19/192 weeksVAC (no details)/conventional moist dressings48 h continuously and then intermittently, 5 min on and 2 min offEvery 2 weeksK, LYesNot reported
Sepúlveda et al, 200918Undertaken in the Vascular Surgery Department of the hospital in Santiago, Chile12/12Until the wound reached 90% granulationVAC (modification)/standard wound dressingsA continuous sub-atmospheric pressure of 100 mmHg until the next treatmentEvaluated weeklyC, F, GYesNot funded
Vaidhya et al, 201519Undertaken in the Department of Surgery, Civil Hospital, Ahmedabad, India30/30Until the ulcer bed had healthy granulation tissue and was ready for skin graftingVAC (modification)/saline-moistened gauzeNegative pressure was applied within a range of 80 to 150 mmHg, the suction was applied 30 min on and 30 min off; dressings changed every 48–72 hNot clearA, H, P, QNot mentionedNot funded
Nain et al, 201120Undertaken at Dayanand Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana, India15/158 weeksVAC (modification)/conventional saline-moistened gauze dressingNegative pressure was applied within a range of 50 to 125 mmHg intermittently three times a day; dressings were changed as and when requiredEvaluated weeklyA, KNoNot funded
Ravari et al, 201321Undertaken in Iran10/132 weeksVAC (KCI)/moist dressing groupApplied 125 mmHg pressure; dressings changed once every 3 daysEvery 3 daysA, K, L, M, N, ONoNot reported
Sajid et al, 201522Undertaken in the Surgical Department, Combined Military Hospital/Military Hospital, Rawalpindi, Pakistan139/1392 weeksVAC (no details)/advanced moist wound therapyApplied 125 mmHg pressure intermittently; dressings changed once every 3 daysEvery weekK, LNot mentionedNot reported
McCallon et al, 200023Undertaken in the US5/513 weeksVAC (modification)/saline-moistened gauzeApplied 125 mmHg pressure; dressings changed every 48 hI, KNoNot reported

Notes: A: the rate of ulcer healing; B: amount of time until granulation tissue formation; C: adverse events; D: amputation; E: the rate of 76%–100% granulation tissue formation; F: the rate of reaching 90% granulation tissue formation; G: time to reach 90% granulation tissue formation; H: time to reach 90% or over 90% of granulation tissue formation; I: amount of time until ulcer was healed; J: SF-36; K: reduction of ulcer area; L: reduction of ulcer depth; M: major amputation; N: minor amputation; O: patient satisfaction; P: number of dressings applied; Q: total cost of dressings.

Abbreviations: EG/CG, experimental group/control group; VAC, vacuum-assisted closure; SF-36, 36-item short form health survey; ITT, intention-to-treat.

Figure 2

Risk of bias graph.

Note: Review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.

Figure 3

Risk of bias summary.

Note: Review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item for each included study.

The DFUs’ complete healing rate

Five articles13,14,19–21 reported the complete ulcer healing rate. In pooling the data, we found no significant heterogeneity among the five studies (Q=6.31, degrees of freedom [df] =4, P=0.18; I2=37%) (Figure 4); therefore, we used a fixed-effects model for the analysis. All reports showed the same results, and the combined RR of 1.48 indicated that the complete ulcer healing rate in the NPWT group was significantly higher than that of the control group (95% CI: 1.24–1.76, P<0.0001).
Figure 4

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 1: the complete DFU healing rate.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel.

Time to complete DFU healing

Four reports13–15,23 provided the time to complete DFU healing, but Armstrong et al13 and Blume et al14 offered the estimated time to complete ulcer healing, so we took the other two results into meta-analysis. The two studies showed some homogeneity after we pooled the data (P=0.46; I2=0%) (Figure 5). Our meta-analysis result showed that the NPWT group had a shorter time to complete healing of DFUs (mean difference: −8.07, 95% CI: −13.70– −2.45, P=0.005) compared with that of the standard dressing changes group.
Figure 5

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 2: time to complete healing of DFUs.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; SD, standard deviation; IV, inverse variance.

Change in DFUs’ size

Six articles16,17,20–23 described a reduction of the DFU area. We found no significant heterogeneity among the six reports after pooling the data (Q=8.30, df=5, P=0.14; I2=40%) (Figure 6) and therefore used a fixed-effects model for the analysis. The combined WMD of 12.18 indicated that NPWT more effectively reduced DFUs’ area than standard dressing changes (95% CI: 8.50–15.86, P<0.00001).
Figure 6

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 3: reduction of DFU area.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; SD, standard deviation; IV, inverse variance.

Three articles16,17,21 described reduction of DFUs’ depth. The three studies showed some homogeneity after we pooled the data (P=0.43; I2=0%) (Figure 7). The combined WMD of 40.82 indicated that NPWT significantly reduced DFUs’ depth in comparison to standard dressing changes (95% CI: 35.97–45.67, P<0.00001).
Figure 7

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 4: reduction of DFU depth.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; SD, standard deviation; IV, inverse variance.

Granulation tissue formation

Four articles13,14,18,19 assessed the granulation tissue formation, but the evaluation results were not unified; therefore, we used descriptive analysis. Armstrong et al13 showed that the time during which 76%–100% of granulation tissue formed in the NPWT group, was shorter than that in the moist dressings change group. Sepúlveda et al18 and Vaidhya et al19 provided the average time to reach 90% or over 90% of wound granulation tissue formation (18.8±6 days and 17.2±3.55 days, respectively) in the NPWT group; both time periods were shorter than corresponding times in the control group.

Quality of life

Karatepe et al15 had patients fill out the 36-item short form health survey (SF-36) questionnaire at the beginning of treatment and in the follow-up month, to ascertain whether the patients’ quality of life improved after treatment. The SF-36 questionnaire included two sections regarding the patient’s physical and mental state. The results showed that the effect of the NPWT treatment was significantly positive for both mental (P=0.0287) and physical (P=0.004) health in comparison to treatment using conventional wound dressing.

Resource use

Armstrong et al13 reported an average total cost per participant of US$26,972 in the NPWT group, compared to US$36,887 in the moist dressing group, with no other information provided. Vaidhya et al19 reported that the mean number of dressings needed to achieve satisfactory healing in the NPWT group was 7.46±2.25, compared to 69.8±11.93 (P<0.001) for the conventional treatment group. Irrespective of the cost of daily treatment or hospital stay, the average cost of NPWT and of conventional dressing was US$55 and US$103 respectively.

Amputation

Three reports13,14,21 provided amputation information. Armstrong et al13 and Blume et al14 analyzed the incidence of re-amputation, Ravari et al21 analyzed the number of patients requiring major and minor amputations. We found no heterogeneity among the three studies after pooling the data (Q=1.15, df=2, P=0.56; I2=0%) (Figure 8). The combined RR of 0.31 indicated that the incidence of amputation in the NPWT group was lower than in the standard dressing changes group (95% CI: 0.15–0.62, P=0.001).
Figure 8

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 5: amputation.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel.

Treatment-related adverse events

Treatment-related adverse DFU events include edema, infection, pain, and bleeding. Infection was the most common adverse event assessed in three RCTs.13,14,16 Sepúlveda et al18 included data for bleeding and pain in addition to infection. The result of the meta-analysis indicated that treatment-related adverse events related to DFU showed no significant difference between the NPWT group and the standard dressing changes group (95% CI: 0.66–1.89, P=0.68) (Figure 9).
Figure 9

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 6: treatment-related adverse events.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; M–H, Mantel–Haenszel.

Sensitivity analysis

Regarding reduction of the DFU area, when we removed a report that contributed to the final result, the direction and magnitude of the pooled RRs did not vary substantially. This indicated a good reliability of this meta-analysis (95% CI: 3.53–14.73, P=0.001) (Figure 10).
Figure 10

NPWT compared with standard dressing changes, outcome 7: sensitivity analysis.

Abbreviations: NPWT, negative-pressure wound therapy; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom; SD, standard deviation; IV, inverse variance.

Discussion

Evaluation of NPWT efficacy

In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we found that NPWT facilitated wound granulation formation and complete DFU closure, reduced DFU healing time, and decreased DFU size in comparison with standard dressing changes. Those results were similar to results of prior system reviews.24,25 However, another systematic review26 concluded that the method of measuring and evaluating ulcer size reduction and complete wound closure may affect the reliability of the results. Therefore, for outcome measures, it is important to focus on the use of blinded measures. Wound bed preparation and granulation tissue formation are also important prerequisites for wound healing. The Patient Outcome Group suggested that the appropriate primary endpoint may not be DFU healing but, rather, percentage granulation tissue formation.27 Four articles13,14,18,19 assessed granulation tissue formation, and two of them used 90% or more than 90% of granulation tissue formation, preparation of re-epithelialization, and skin grafting as endpoints. The evaluation results showed that NPWT could accelerate granulation formation in comparison to standard dressing changes. It is known that foot wounds secondary to amputation are deeper, with exposed bone and tendons and pre-existing infection, and would lead to delayed wound healing. Armstrong et al13 enrolled 162 diabetic patients with post-operative wounds to receive NPWT treatment or moist dressing treatment. The rate of complete wound healing for patients receiving NPWT (56%) was higher than for the moist dressings group (39%); the median time to reach 76%–100% granulation tissue for patients receiving NPWT (42 days) was less than for the control group (84 days), which suggested that NPWT had the potential to promote more complex and severe wound healing and prepare an adequately granulated wound bed.

Evaluation of NWPT safety

Treatment-related adverse DFU events include edema, infection, pain, and bleeding. The meta-analysis results showed that NPWT neither increased nor decreased the incidence of treatment-related side effects as compared with the standard dressing change group; which suggested that adverse events related to NPWT were not serious. However, in 2011 the US Food and Drug Administration updated a report on serious complications associated with NPWT and cited 12 deaths and 174 injuries since 2007.11 Ren and Li reported sepsis in a burns patient treated with NPWT.28 It should be noted that acute hemorrhages caused all of the deaths because large, exposed blood vessels and bleeding were ignored. Meanwhile, some of these serious adverse events occurred at home or in a long-term care facility, where the patients, nurses, and home care providers might not have received adequate training to do NPWT properly. In the eleven RCTs that we included in our meta-analysis, the intervention settings were hospitals or wound centers where professionals are familiar with NPWT indications and adhere to treatment guidelines.29 This may be why serious complications did not occur in the studies we reviewed in our meta-analysis. DFUs are a leading cause of non-traumatic foot amputation; Armstrong et al13 reported that the number of patients who received NPWT treatment were a quarter less likely to need re-amputation compared to controls. The result of our meta-analysis also indicated that NPWT could effectively reduce the occurrence of amputation. The rate of amputation decreased in the NPWT treatment group and is attributed to faster removal of infectious material, better preparation of granulated wound bed, and more rapid healing.

Evaluation of NPWT cost-effectiveness

A post hoc retrospective analysis indicated that for patients with DFUs who achieved complete wound closure, the median cost per 1 cm2 of closure was US$1,227 with NPWT and US$1,695 with advanced moist wound therapy, which showed greater cost-effectiveness in the NPWT group for treating recalcitrant wounds.30 Two analyses31,32 based on economic models also concluded that, compared to patients treated with advanced wound care, patients treated with VAC therapy had increased quality-adjusted life years and a higher healing rate at a lower cost. Vaidhya et al19 concluded that the mean dressings and total cost of dressings needed to achieve satisfactory healing in the NPWT group, were less than for the conventional dressing changes group. However, in this RCT, the VAC was modified to the standard KCI VAC therapy kit, so subsequent RCTs are needed to evaluate the cost of commercial VAC NPWT for treating DFUs. Moreover, considering the actual situation of medical resources available in developing countries, a modified NPWT device may be a future research direction for NPWT experiments in resource-poor settings.

Evaluation of other aspects of NPWT

One RCT17 evaluated quality of life using the SF-36 questionnaire, which suggested that NPWT remarkably improved the quality of life of DFU patients. Another RCT, in which no amputation was performed,21 evaluated patient satisfaction by that measure, indicating that patients in the NPWT group were more satisfied. However, we would prefer to survey patients rather than relying on a secondary outcome to assess patient satisfaction.

Limitations

From the details of included studies, important information was not fully available. Only four articles13,14,17,18 offered data related to the ankle brachial index (ABI), even though ABI measurement is a simple and effective method of judging lower limb vascular disease to determine whether amputation is necessary.33 Two studies15,22 provided the duration of DM, which could influence the peripheral neuropathy leading to the formation of DFUs.34 It was reported that body mass was significantly associated with pressure in the mid-foot models.35 Two articles calculated average weight, and another two calculated body mass index, whereas no relevant details about local pressure on the foot were provided in the remaining seven studies. Stratified randomization was not performed for the severity of DFUs, thus, the patient characteristics in each group were not balanced. Meanwhile, there were many other influencing factors, including the relatively small sample sizes, insufficient description of methodologic details, inadequate follow-up time, and so on, which can result in clinical heterogeneity. Finally, because we retrieved only published literature, the document collection may be incomplete.

Conclusion

This meta-analysis of eleven RCTs extends support for the use of NPWT in the treatment of DFUs and post-operative wounds in diabetic patients. Additional robust RCT research is necessary to solidify support for the treatment.
  31 in total

Review 1.  Cost of treating diabetic foot ulcers in five different countries.

Authors:  Peter Cavanagh; Christopher Attinger; Zulfiqarali Abbas; Arun Bal; Nina Rojas; Zhang-Rong Xu
Journal:  Diabetes Metab Res Rev       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 4.876

2.  Negative pressure wound therapy after partial diabetic foot amputation: a multicentre, randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  David G Armstrong; Lawrence A Lavery
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2005-11-12       Impact factor: 79.321

3.  Diabetic foot ulcers: Part I. Pathophysiology and prevention.

Authors:  Afsaneh Alavi; R Gary Sibbald; Dieter Mayer; Laurie Goodman; Mariam Botros; David G Armstrong; Kevin Woo; Thomas Boeni; Elizabeth A Ayello; Robert S Kirsner
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2014-01       Impact factor: 11.527

Review 4.  Primary amputation: is there still a place for it?

Authors:  F Setacci; P Sirignano; G De Donato; G Galzerano; A Cappelli; G Palasciano; C Setacci
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Surg (Torino)       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 1.888

5.  An economic evaluation of VAC therapy compared with wound dressings in the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers.

Authors:  S Flack; J Apelqvist; M Keith; P Trueman; D Williams
Journal:  J Wound Care       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 2.072

6.  A blinded, prospective, randomized controlled trial of topical negative pressure wound closure in India.

Authors:  Gita N Mody; Ida Anita Nirmal; Sulochana Duraisamy; Benjamin Perakath
Journal:  Ostomy Wound Manage       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 2.629

7.  Evaluation of wound care and health-care use costs in patients with diabetic foot ulcers treated with negative pressure wound therapy versus advanced moist wound therapy.

Authors:  Vickie R Driver; Peter A Blume
Journal:  J Am Podiatr Med Assoc       Date:  2014-03

8.  Burden of diabetic foot ulcers for medicare and private insurers.

Authors:  J Bradford Rice; Urvi Desai; Alice Kate G Cummings; Howard G Birnbaum; Michelle Skornicki; Nathan B Parsons
Journal:  Diabetes Care       Date:  2013-11-01       Impact factor: 19.112

9.  Role of negative pressure wound therapy in healing of diabetic foot ulcers.

Authors:  Prabhdeep Singh Nain; Sanjeev K Uppal; Ramneesh Garg; Kuljyot Bajaj; Shirin Garg
Journal:  J Surg Tech Case Rep       Date:  2011-01

10.  The influence of diabetic peripheral neuropathy on local postural muscle and central sensory feedback balance control.

Authors:  Nima Toosizadeh; Jane Mohler; David G Armstrong; Talal K Talal; Bijan Najafi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-10       Impact factor: 3.240

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  14 in total

1.  Management of hard-to-heal diabetic foot ulcers: local use of autologous leucocytes, platelets and fibrin multi-layered patches (LeucoPatch).

Authors:  Francisco Javier Álvaro-Afonso; Jose Luis Lázaro-Martínez; Yolanda García-Álvarez; Nikolaos Papanas
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2018-12

2.  Randomized Controlled Trial on Autologous Platelet-Rich Plasma Versus Saline Dressing in Treatment of Non-healing Diabetic Foot Ulcers.

Authors:  Ahmed Elsaid; Mohammed El-Said; Sameh Emile; Mohamed Youssef; Wael Khafagy; Ayman Elshobaky
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 3.352

3.  The Combined Use of a Non-Invasive Skin-Stretching Device and the Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy Technique in the Treatment of Postoperative Diabetic Foot.

Authors:  Liangchen Wang; Chenrui Wang; Hongmei Chen; Ying Chen; Juan Li; Li Xiao; Di Zhu; Caizhe Yang
Journal:  Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes       Date:  2021-08-05       Impact factor: 3.168

Review 4.  Update on management of diabetic foot ulcers.

Authors:  Estelle Everett; Nestoras Mathioudakis
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 5.691

5.  Negative pressure wound therapy for treating foot wounds in people with diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  Zhenmi Liu; Jo C Dumville; Robert J Hinchliffe; Nicky Cullum; Fran Game; Nikki Stubbs; Michael Sweeting; Frank Peinemann
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2018-10-17

6.  New trends in the orthopaedic management of diabetic foot.

Authors:  Önder I Kılıçoğlu; Mehmet Demirel; Şamil Aktaş
Journal:  EFORT Open Rev       Date:  2018-05-21

7.  Comparison of Vacuum-Assisted Closure Therapy and Conventional Dressing on Wound Healing in Patients with Diabetic Foot Ulcer: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

Authors:  Sangma M D James; Sathasivam Sureshkumar; Thirthar P Elamurugan; Naik Debasis; Chellappa Vijayakumar; Chinnakali Palanivel
Journal:  Niger J Surg       Date:  2019 Jan-Jun

Review 8.  The effectiveness of negative pressure wound therapy as a novel management of diabetic foot ulcers: an overview of systematic reviews.

Authors:  Shahrzad Mohseni; Maryam Aalaa; Rasha Atlasi; Mohamad Reza Mohajeri Tehrani; Mahnaz Sanjari; Mohamad Reza Amini
Journal:  J Diabetes Metab Disord       Date:  2019-11-25

9.  A modified negative pressure wound therapy for the treatment of refractory wounds: A preliminary study.

Authors:  Dong Xing; Zhaoxu Yang; Can Cao; Zhijie Dong; Jingchao Wei; Xuehong Zheng; Wenyi Li
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2020-07-10       Impact factor: 1.817

10.  Using a combination therapy to combat scalp necrosis: a case report.

Authors:  Kazem Hajmohammadi; Roghayeh Esmaeili Zabihi; Kamran Akbarzadeh; Naser Parizad
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2020-08-20
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