| Literature DB >> 28458556 |
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).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
Figure 1Flow diagram for identification of studies for inclusion in meta-analysis.
Abbreviation: RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Characteristics of participants in included studies
| Author and year | Study design | Study size | Mean age (years) | ABI (mmHg) | BMI (kg/m2) | Duration of DM (years) | Size of ulcers (cm2) | Location of ulcers | Severity of ulcers | Ulcers’ duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armstrong and Lavery, 2005 | RCT | 162 | 57.2±13.4/60.1±12.2 | 1.1±0.20/1.1±0.19 | 30.8±7.8/31.4±9.4 | Not mentioned | 22.3±23.4/19.2±17.6 | Foot amputation | University of Texas grade 2 or 3 in depth | 1.2±3.9/1.8±5.9 months |
| Blume et al, 2008 | RCT | 342 | 58±12/59±12 | 1.0±0.2/1.0±0.2 | kg: 99.2±25.1/93.8±25.6 | Not mentioned | 13.5±18.2/11.1±2.7 | Calcaneal dorsal or plantar foot ulcer | Wagner’s scale grade 2 or 3 | 198.3±323.5/206.03±65.9 days |
| Karatepe et al, 2011 | RCT | 67 | 68.5±11.1/66.3±12.6 | Not clear | kg: 62.8±14.5/62.1±14.4 | 11.3±9.2/9.3±7.6 | 35.7±6.4/29.7±5.2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 11.3±9.2/8.8± 7.2 weeks |
| Eginton et al, 2003 | RCT | 10 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Length: 7.7±1.6 cm width: 3.5±0.6 cm | Significant soft tissue defect | Not mentioned | ≥1 month |
| Sun and Sun, 2007 | RCT | 38 | 66.5 | 0.7≤ ABI ≤1.2 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 24.5±1.4 | Not mentioned | University of Texas grade 2 or 3 in depth | ≥1 month |
| Sepúlveda et al, 2009 | RCT | 24 | 61.5±10/62.1±8 | 1.05±0.5/1.16±0.6 | 28.1±4/26.6±4 | Not mentioned | 168.0±8/169.6±6 | Transmetatarsal amputation wound of two or more contiguous toes or the first toe | Not clear | Not clear |
| Vaidhya et al, 2015 | RCT | 60 | 56.5 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Size >10 cm2 | Dorsum of foot | Not mentioned | Not clear |
| Nain et al, 2011 | RCT | 30 | 61.33±7.63/55.40±11.54 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 50–200 cm2 | Not clear | Not mentioned | Not clear |
| Ravari et al, 2013 | RCT | 23 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Ulcer area: | Right foot | Wagner’s scale grade 1 to 4 | ≥1 month |
| Sajid et al, 2015 | RCT | 278 | 56.83±11.3/55.88±10.97 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 15.96±5.79/15.65±4.86 | 15.09±2.81/15.07±2.92 | Calcaneal dorsal or plantar foot ulcer | Majority of patients had Wagner’s grade 2 ulcer | Not mentioned |
| McCallon et al, 2000 | RCT | 10 | 55.4±12.8/50.2±8.7 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not clear | Forefoot, mid-foot | Not 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.
Specific implementation of intervention measures
| Author and year | Intervention setting | Intervention size (EG/CG) | Follow-up time | Intervention measures | The feature of VAC | Evaluation time | Outcome indicators | ITT analysis | Funding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armstrong and Lavery, 2005 | Undertaken in wound and academic centers in the US | 77/85 | 112 days | VAC (KCI)/standard moist wound care | VAC system; dressings changed every 48 h | Evaluated at 0, 7, 14, 28, 42, 56, 84, and 112 days | A, B, C, D, E | Yes | Funded by KCI Manufacturing |
| Blume et al, 2008 | Undertaken in the US | 169/166 | 112 days | VAC (KCI)/advanced moist wound therapy | Negative pressure ranging from 50 to 200 mmHg | Examined weekly for the first 4 weeks then every other week until day 112 or ulcer closure | A, C, D, E | Yes | Funded by KCI Manufacturing |
| Karatepe et al, 2011 | Undertaken in a Turkish hospital | 30/37 | Not mentioned | VAC (no details)/conventional wound care treatment | VAC (no details) | Not mentioned | I, J | No | Not reported |
| Eginton et al, 2003 | Undertaken in a US hospital and medical center | 5/5 | 2 weeks | VAC (no details)/conventional moist dressings | 125 mmHg continuous negative pressure; dressings changed three times a week or more if needed | Evaluated weekly | K, L | No | Not funded |
| Sun and Sun, 2007 | Undertaken in the Changhai Hospital, Second Military Medical University of Chinese People’s Liberation Army | 19/19 | 2 weeks | VAC (no details)/conventional moist dressings | 48 h continuously and then intermittently, 5 min on and 2 min off | Every 2 weeks | K, L | Yes | Not reported |
| Sepúlveda et al, 2009 | Undertaken in the Vascular Surgery Department of the hospital in Santiago, Chile | 12/12 | Until the wound reached 90% granulation | VAC (modification)/standard wound dressings | A continuous sub-atmospheric pressure of 100 mmHg until the next treatment | Evaluated weekly | C, F, G | Yes | Not funded |
| Vaidhya et al, 2015 | Undertaken in the Department of Surgery, Civil Hospital, Ahmedabad, India | 30/30 | Until the ulcer bed had healthy granulation tissue and was ready for skin grafting | VAC (modification)/saline-moistened gauze | Negative 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 h | Not clear | A, H, P, Q | Not mentioned | Not funded |
| Nain et al, 2011 | Undertaken at Dayanand Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana, India | 15/15 | 8 weeks | VAC (modification)/conventional saline-moistened gauze dressing | Negative pressure was applied within a range of 50 to 125 mmHg intermittently three times a day; dressings were changed as and when required | Evaluated weekly | A, K | No | Not funded |
| Ravari et al, 2013 | Undertaken in Iran | 10/13 | 2 weeks | VAC (KCI)/moist dressing group | Applied 125 mmHg pressure; dressings changed once every 3 days | Every 3 days | A, K, L, M, N, O | No | Not reported |
| Sajid et al, 2015 | Undertaken in the Surgical Department, Combined Military Hospital/Military Hospital, Rawalpindi, Pakistan | 139/139 | 2 weeks | VAC (no details)/advanced moist wound therapy | Applied 125 mmHg pressure intermittently; dressings changed once every 3 days | Every week | K, L | Not mentioned | Not reported |
| McCallon et al, 2000 | Undertaken in the US | 5/5 | 13 weeks | VAC (modification)/saline-moistened gauze | Applied 125 mmHg pressure; dressings changed every 48 h | I, K | No | Not 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 2Risk of bias graph.
Note: Review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Figure 3Risk of bias summary.
Note: Review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Figure 4NPWT 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.
Figure 5NPWT 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.
Figure 6NPWT 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.
Figure 7NPWT 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.
Figure 8NPWT 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.
Figure 9NPWT 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.
Figure 10NPWT 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.