| Literature DB >> 35584410 |
Açucena Leal de Araújo1,2, Francisca Diana da Silva Negreiros3, Raquel Sampaio Florêncio1,2, Shérida Karanini Paz de Oliveira1, Ana Roberta Vilarouca da Silva4, Thereza Maria Magalhães Moreira1,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: to analyze the effect of cutaneous foot thermometry in people with Diabetes Mellitus, compared with the standard prevention of foot ulcers adopted in these patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35584410 PMCID: PMC9109465 DOI: 10.1590/1518-8345.5663.3567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Lat Am Enfermagem ISSN: 0104-1169
Figure 1Search flowchart according to the PRISMA recommendations
Characteristics of the RCTs included in the SR (n=5). Fortaleza, CE, Brazil, 2021
| Author/ Year/ Country | Characteristics of the sample | Intervention Group/Control Group | Main results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armstrong, et al. | n=225 (IG*: 110, CG†: 115) Male: 96% Mean age: 69 years old DM2‡: 100% Mean time since DM diagnosis: 13 years Risk of ulcer: 2/3 (IWGDF§) | Duration: 18 months Outcomes: Proportion of patients in each group who developed foot ulcers | IG*: Handheld infrared thermometer and recording in diary | CG†: Therapeutic footwear, education on diabetes, regular foot care and recording in diary | Incidence of foot ulcers: IG*: 4.7% (n=5/NR||), CG†: 12.2% (n=14/NR||) |
| Bus, et al. | n=304 (IG*: 151, CG†: 153) Male: 72.4% Mean age: 65 DM2‡: 77% Mean time since DM diagnosis: 20 years Risk of ulcer: 2/3 (IWGDF§) | Duration: 18 months Outcomes: Proportion of patients in each group who developed foot ulcers | IG*: Handheld infrared thermometer and recording in a standardized form developed by the researcher. | CG†: Foot assessment and foot screening once every 1-3 months by a podiatrist; therapeutic footwear (if indicated) and foot care education | Incidence of foot ulcers: IG*: 29.1% (n=44/151), CG†: 37.3% (n=57/153) |
| Lavery, et al. | n=85 (IG*: 44, CG†: 41) Male: 50% Mean age: 55 years old DM2‡: NR Mean time since the diabetes diagnosis: 14 years Risk of ulcer: 2/3 (IWGDF§) | Duration: 06 months Outcomes: Proportion of patients in each group who developed foot ulcers, infections, Charcot fractures and amputations | IG*: Handheld infrared thermometer and recording in diary | GC†: Therapeutic footwear, foot care education, and regular assessment by a podiatrist every 10-12 weeks | Incidence of foot ulcers: IG*: 2% (n=1/44) CG†: 20% (n=9/41) (seven people presented ulcerations and two had Charcot arthropathies) |
| Lavery, et al. | n=173 (IG1: 59, IG2: 56, CG: 58) Male: 54% Mean age: 65 years old DM2‡: 95% Mean time since the diabetes diagnosis: 13 years Risk of ulcer: 2/3 (IWGDF§) | Duration: 15 months Outcomes: Proportion of patients in each group who developed foot ulcers | IG1: Handheld infrared thermometer and recording in diary. IG2: Mirror for self-inspection of the feet twice a day and recording in diary | CG†: Evaluation of the lower limbs (physician), program, therapeutic shoes and evaluation of insoles (podiatrist), pedometer and recording in diary; inspecting the feet daily | Incidence of foot ulcers: IG1: 8.5 (n=5/59) IG2: 30.4 (n=17/56) CG†: 29.3 (n=17/58) |
| Skafjeld, et al. | n=41 (IG*: 21, CG†: 20) Male: 56% Mean age: 58 years old DM2‡: 71% Mean time since the diabetes diagnosis: 18 years Risk of ulcer: 3 (IWGDF§) | Duration: 12 months Outcomes: Proportion of patients in each group who developed foot ulcers | IG*: Handheld infrared thermometer, recording in diary, theory-based counseling, and pedometer for recording physical activity in the first week of the study | GC†: Daily foot inspection and recording in diary; use of therapeutic footwear; contacting a nurse if changes were observed | Incidence of foot ulcers: IG*: 39% (n=7/21) CG†: 50% (n=10/20) |
*IG = Intervention Group; †CG = Control Group; ‡DM2 = Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; §IWGDF = International Working Group on Diabetic Foot; ||NR = Not Reported.
Figure 3Summary of the risk of bias for the studies included
Figure 4Meta-analysis of the effect of thermometry when compared to standard health care in preventing the incidence of diabetic foot ulcers
Classification of the evidence certainty on the effect of thermometry for the prevention of diabetic foot ulcers. GRADEpro GDT. Fortaleza, CE, Brazil, 2021
| Assessment of Certainty | No. of patients | Effect | Certainty of the evidence | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirect evidence | Imprecision | Other considerations | Skin thermometry | Standard health care | Relative (95% CI*) | Absolute (95%CI*) | ||
| Preventing the incidence of diabetic foot ulcers (Follow-up: Mean of 12.8 months) | ||||||||||||
| 4 | Randomized clinical trials | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | Serious† | None | 57/275 (20.7%) | 91/272 (33.5%) | RR‡ 0.53 (From 0.29 to 0.96) | 16 minus by 100 (from 24 minus to 1 minus) | ꚚꚚꚚꚚО Moderate | IMPORTANT |
*CI = Confidence Interval; †Low number of events; ‡RR = Relative Risk