| Literature DB >> 35415069 |
Steven M Maurer1, Zehra S Hepp1,2, Shawna McCallin3, Felix W A Waibel1, Federico C Romero4, Yılmaz Zorman5, Benjamin A Lipsky6, İlker Uçkay7.
Abstract
Diabetic foot infection is a frequent complication in long-standing diabetes mellitus. For antimicrobial therapy of this infection, both the optimal duration and the route of administration are often based more on expert opinion than on published evidence. We reviewed the scientific literature, specifically seeking prospective trials, and aimed at addressing two clinical issues: (1) shortening the currently recommended antibiotic duration and (2) using oral (rather than parenteral) therapy, especially after the patient has undergone debridement and revascularization. We also reviewed some older key articles that are critical to our understanding of the treatment of these infections, particularly with respect to diabetic foot osteomyelitis. Our conclusion is that the maximum duration of antibiotic therapy for osteomyelitis should be no more than to 4-6 weeks and might even be shorter in selected cases. In the future, in addition to conducting randomized trials and propagating national and international guidance, we should also explore innovative strategies, such as intraosseous antibiotic agents and bacteriophages. Copyright:Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35415069 PMCID: PMC8990364 DOI: 10.5194/jbji-7-61-2022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Jt Infect ISSN: 2206-3552
Literature randomizing the antibiotic treatment duration for diabetic foot osteomyelitis.
| Reference (Country) | Number of episodes | Duration of antibiotics | Minimal follow-up | Major findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tone et al. (2015) (France) | 40 | 6 weeks ( | 12 weeks ( | Overall cure in 26 (65 %) patients; no significant differences between the 6-week and 12-week groups (12 out of 20 patients vs. 14 out of 20 patients, respectively; | |
| Gariani et al. (2021) (Switzerland) | 93 | 3 weeks( | 6 weeks( | Cure in 37 (84 %) of patients in the 3-week group vs. 36 (73 %) in the 6-week group ( | |