| Literature DB >> 31404410 |
A Mizzi1, K Cassar2, C Bowen3, C Formosa1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermittent claudication (IC) is the most common symptom of peripheral arterial disease and is generally treated conservatively due to limited prognostic evidence to support early revascularisation in the individual patient. This approach may lead to the possible loss of opportunity of early revascularisation in patients who are more likely to deteriorate to critical limb ischaemia. The aim of this review is to evaluate the available literature related to the progression rate of symptomatic peripheral arterial disease.Entities:
Keywords: Haemodynamic deterioration; Intermittent claudication; Peripheral arterial disease; Prognosis; Progression
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31404410 PMCID: PMC6683562 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-019-0351-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Keywords and MeSH headings used for literature search
Search 1: MeSH headings – intermittent claudication Intermittent claudication AND Prognosis Intermittent claudication AND fate Intermittent claudication AND natural history Intermittent claudication AND progression Intermittent claudication AND outcome Search 2: MeSH headings - peripheral arterial disease, peripheral vascular disease Peripheral arterial disease/ peripheral vascular disease AND Prognosis Peripheral arterial disease/ peripheral vascular disease AND Progression Peripheral arterial disease/ peripheral vascular disease AND natural history Peripheral arterial disease/ peripheral vascular disease AND outcome |
Interpretation of bias risk [23]
| Risk of bias | Interpretation | Within a study | Across studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk of bias. | Plausible bias unlikely to seriously alter the results. | Low risk of bias for all key domains. | Most information is from studies at low risk of bias. |
| Unclear risk of bias. | Plausible bias that raises some doubt about the results. | Unclear risk of bias for one or more key domains. | Most information is from studies at low or unclear risk of bias. |
| High risk of bias. | Plausible bias that seriously weakens confidence in the results. | High risk of bias for one or more key domains. | The proportion of information from studies at high risk of bias is sufficient to affect the interpretation of results. |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart for study selection
Characteristics of included trials
| Publications | Trial characteristics | Haemodynamic measure | Progression of PAD | Prognostic factors for progression of PAD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smith et al. 1998 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 235 participants with IC 3 year follow-up | ABPI | ABPI decreased by > 0.14 after 1 year in 21% of participants, 12.5% developed CLI after 3 years | Hypertriglycerideamia, ABPI < 0.5 at baseline is associated with increased risk of deterioration |
| Smith et al. 2003 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 131 participants with IC 5 and 12 year follow-up | ABPI | Overall decrease in ABI by 0.09 over 5 yrs. in higher ABPI limb. Decrease in ABPI by 0.04 in lower ABPI limb | Higher ABI associated with faster deterioration Lower ABI associated with increased risk of lower limb events |
| Walsh et al. 1991 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 38 participants (45 limbs) with IC and SFA stenosis 3 year follow-up | Arteriograms, and duplex scans | 15.6% of participants developed a 30% increase in stenosis after 1 year. | Smoking and symptom progression predictive of SFA stenosis progression. SFA occlusion is synchronous with symptom progression. Contralateral SFA occlusion increases risk of faster stenosis |
| Bird et al. 1999 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 177 participants with IC 4.7 year follow-up | ABPI, San Diego Claudication questionnaire | Overall ABI decrease of 0.02 over 4.6 yrs. and TBPI decrease by 0.013 in 4.7 years | Age, DM are associated with rapid progression |
| Aquino et al. 2001 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 1244 male veterans with IC 3.7 year follow-up | ABPI | Overall yearly decline in ABPI by 0.014 | ABPI < 0.5, high smoking pack years and DM increase risk CLI |
| Naschitz et al. 1988 [ | Retrospective cohort study 460 participants with IC referred for vascular surgical consultation 3.8 year follow-up | ABPI, Doppler waveforms, angiography | Decrease by 0.15 in ABPI in those who deteriorate (53.2% of participants) | ABI > 0.7, no deterioration of ABI predicts good outcome ABI < 0.5 at baseline increases risk of deterioration by 3.8 times ABI decrease by 0.15 increases risk by 1.9 times for need eventual surgery |
| Fowkes et al. 1993 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 617 participants with IC 1 year follow-up | ABPI | Overall ABPI decrease by -- 0.01 per year 4.8% developed CLI, no haemodynamic report | Age, smoking associated with deterioration in ABPI |
| Whyman et al. 1993 [ | Prospective observational cohort study 38 participants with IC with femoropopliteal artery stenosis 19 months | Duplex scan (Bollinger score) | Patients with velocity ratio > 3 progressed to occlusion within 13 weeks | Velocity ratio of > 3 associated with occlusion within 76 weeks. |
Risk of bias of included trials
| Source of bias | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First author | Allocation concealment | Selective recruitment | Incomplete outcome data | Survival selection | Summary risk of bias |
| Naschitz 1988 [ | yes | yes | no | yes | high |
| Walsh (1991) [ | yes | yes | no | no | moderate |
| Fowkes (1993) [ | yes | yes | no | yes | high |
| Whyman (1993) [ | No | No | yes | No | low |
| Bird (1999) [ | yes | yes | yes | yes | High |
| Smith (1998) [ | No | yes | yes | yes | high |
| Smith (2003) [ | No | yes | yes | yes | high |
| Aquino (2005) [ | no | yes | no | yes | moderate |