| Literature DB >> 35812995 |
Jeroen J W M Brouwers1,2, Siem A Willems1,2, Lauren N Goncalves3, Jaap F Hamming1, Abbey Schepers1.
Abstract
Background: Medial arterial calcification (MAC), frequently associated with diabetes mellitus (DM) and chronic kidney disease (CKD), is a systemic vascular disorder leading to stiffness and incompressible arteries. These changes impede the accuracy of bedside tests to diagnose peripheral arterial disease (PAD). This review aimed to evaluate the reliability of bedside tests for the detection of PAD in patients prone to MAC.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic kidney disease; Diabetes mellitus; Diagnosis; Medial arterial calcification; Non-invasive diagnostics; Peripheral arterial disease; Systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35812995 PMCID: PMC9256539 DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EClinicalMedicine ISSN: 2589-5370
The interpretation of likelihood ratios and their effect on post-test probability of disease.
| Positive likelihood ratio (PLR) | Negative likelihood ratio (NLR) | Interpretation: effect on ability to rule in/rule out disease |
|---|---|---|
| >10 | <0·1 | Large |
| 5-10 | 0·1-0·2 | Moderate |
| 2-5 | 0·2-0·5 | Small |
| 1 | 1 | No change |
Figure 1Flow diagram illustrating article selection process according to the PRISMA guidelines.
Evidence table of all included studies.
| Author & year (ref) | Country | Study design & setting | Population (n, age, gender, comorbidity, patient characteristics) | Index/non-invasive/point of care test | Reference test; definition of PAD | Index test performance (sensitivity/specificity/PLR/NLR) | Comments/opinion | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AbuRahma et al. | United States of America | Single-center retrospective cohort study | ABI <0.9 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | The proportion of patients who had TBI is unclear. | ||||
| *Aubert et al. | France | Single-centercross-sectional cohort study | N = 200 patients with diabetes (400 lower limbs) | ABI ≤0·90 or ≥1·30 | DUS (PAD was defined as >70% stenosis) | Patients with CKD (eGFR < 30 ml/min) were excluded. | |||
| Buschmann et al. | Austria | Single-centerprospective cohort study | ABI ≤0·88 | DSA (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Only patients with ABI of ≤0·90 or ≥1·30 and >25% stenosis at DUS were referred for DSA. The proportion is unclear. | ||||
| Clairotte et al. | France | Single-centerprospective cohort study | Doppler and oscillometric derived ABI <0·90 | DUS (PAD was defined as systolic velocity ratio >2·0) | Unblinded study | ||||
| Faglia Ezio et al. | Italy | Single-centerprospective cohort study | N = 261 patients with diabetes and rest pain and/or foot ulcer in 1 limb | Ankle pressure (AP) <70 mm Hg | DSA (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Unblinded study | |||
| Homza et al. | Czech Republic | Single-centerprospective cohort study | N = 62 patients with diabetes (124 limbs) | Doppler ABI using highest ankle pressure (hABI) <0·9 or >1·4 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Patients with critical limb ischemia were excluded (Rutherford 4-6). | |||
| Hur et al. | South Korea | Single-centerretrospective cohort study | N = 324 patients with diabetes | ABI <0·9 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Patients with ABI >1·40 were excluded. | |||
| Janssen et al. | Germany | Single-centerprospective cohortstudy | N = 106 patients with diabetes who were hospitalized | ABI <0·9 | The need for revascularization on the basis of | In total, 54% of patients had medial arterial calcification (assessment on X-ray). | |||
| Li et al. | China | Single-centercross-sectional cohort study | ABI >1·45 | DUS and MRA | The optimal ABI threshold was calculated (determined with Youden index). | ||||
| *Normahani et al. | United Kingdom | Multicenter prospective cohort study | N = 305 patients with diabetes (recruited from diabetic foot clinics) | Pulse palpation (absence of dorsalis pedis or posterior tibial artery pulse) | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | PAD-scan was performed using a portable ultrasound machine with a linear 6-14Hz transducer. A ‘normal’ biphasic waveform indicated no PAD. However, several adverse features are mentioned in this study leading biphasic waveforms to abnormal: | |||
| Perriss et al. | Denmark | Single-centerretrospective cohort study | N = 104 patients with end-stage renal failure who underwent CE-MRA of the lower extremity | ABI <0·90 | CE-MRA (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | In 80 out of 104 patients, the indication for MRA was pretransplant evaluation (asymptomatic). | |||
| Premalatha et al. | India | Single-centerprospective cohort study | N = 100 hospital admitted patients with diabetes and severe foot infections | ABI <0·90 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Six patients with calcification of peripheral vessels were excluded (unclear how presence of calcification was assessed). | |||
| Ro et al. | South Korea | Single-centerretrospective cohort study | N = 97 patients (194 legs), who had coincidentally undergone CTA, PPG, ABI and CWD for the evaluation of PAD | ABI <0.90 | CTA (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | ||||
| Saunders et al. | United Kingdom | Single-centerretrospective cohort study | N = 16 patients (32 limbs) | Vascular early warning system (VEWS) device | MRA (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | VEWS functions by using red and infrared optical sensors placed on the toe and dorsum of the foot to | |||
| Sonter et al. | Australia | Single-centerprospective cohort study | TBI <0·70 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | 32% of patients had medial arterial calcification. However, it was unclear how presence of medial arterial calcification was assessed. | ||||
| Tehan et al. | Australia | Single-center prospective cross- sectional case-control study | ABI ≤ 0·90 or > 1·4 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Ten percent of patients with diabetes had incompressible ankle pressures. | ||||
| Tehan et al. | Australia | Single-centerretrospective case-control study | Toe pressure < 97 mmHg | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | TP cutoff value was calculated based on ROC curves. | ||||
| Tehan et al. | Australia | Single-centerretrospective case-control study | ABI ≤ 0·9 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | 28% of patients had incompressible ankle pressures. | ||||
| Tehan et al. | Australia | Single-center retrospective case-control study | Continuous wave Doppler (CWD): monophasic or absent signal. | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Unblinded study | ||||
| Ugwu et al. | Nigeria | Single-center cross-sectional cohort study | N = 163 patients with diabetes (319 legs) with clinical suspicion of lower extremity PAD | ABI < 0·9 | DUS (PAD was defined as >50%) | Seven patients with ABI >1·3 were excluded. | |||
| *Vriens et al. | United Kingdom | Single-center prospective cohort study | N = 60 patients with diabetes-related foot ulceration | Palpation of pulses | DUS (PAD was defined as >50% stenosis) | Waveform analysis was not blinded to the reference test. | |||
| Williams et al. | United Kingdom | Single-center prospective case-control study | Foot pulse: absence of one or both foot pulses. | DUS (PAD was defined as significant velocity change and flow disturbance locally that resulted in loss of reverse flow distally, caused by occlusions or stenosis) | Active foot disease, rest pain, or signs suggestive of lower limb critical ischemia were excluded. | ||||
| Zhang et al. | China | Single-center retrospective case-control study | N = 184 patients with diabetes were screened for PAD | ABI < 0·9 | DUS (Large plaque>10 mm2 with 100% increase in peak systolic | Patients who had one leg with low ABI and one leg with high ABI were excluded. | |||
Studies of high methodological quality are marked with asterisks (*).
ABI = Ankle-Brachial Index, ABP = Ankle-Brachial Pressure, ACCmax = Maximal Systolic Acceleration, AP = Ankle Pressure, CKD = Chronic Kidney Disease, CTA = Computed Tomography Angiography, CWD = Continuous Wave Doppler, DM = Diabetes Mellitus, DSA = Digital Subtraction Angiography, DUS = Duplex Ultrasonography, MRA = Magnetic Resonance Angiography, PAD = Peripheral Arterial Disease, PI = Pulsatility index, PPG = Photoplethysmography, RPSI = Relative Pulse Slope Index, TBI = Toe-Brachial Index, TcPO2 = Transcutaneous Oxygen Tension, and TP = Toe Pressure.
Methodological assessment of all included studies based on QUADAS-2 tool.
| Author & year | Risk of bias | Applicability concerns | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient selection | Index test | Reference standard | Flow & timing | Patient selection | Index test | Reference standard | |
| AbuRahma 2020 | Unclear | Low | Unclear | High | Low | Low | Low |
| Aubert 2013 | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Buschmann 2018 | Low | High | Unclear | High | Low | Low | Low |
| Clairotte 2009 | High | High | High | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Faglia Ezio 2010 | High | Low | High | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Homza 2019 | Low | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Hur 2018 | Low | Low | Unclear | Low | Unclear | Low | Low |
| Janssen 2005 | High | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Unclear |
| Li 2015 | High | High | Unclear | High | Unclear | High | Low |
| Normahani 2020 | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Perriss 2005 | High | Unclear | Unclear | High | High | Low | Low |
| Premalatha 2002 | High | Low | Unclear | High | Low | Low | Low |
| Ro 2013 | High | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Saunders 2019 | High | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Sonter 2017 | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Tehan 2016 | Low | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Tehan 2017 | High | High | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Tehan 2018 | High | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Tehan 2018 | High | Low | High | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Ugwu 2021 | Low | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Vriens 2018 | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| Williams 2005 | High | Low | Unclear | Low | High | Low | Low |
| Zhang 2010 | Low | Unclear | Unclear | High | High | Low | Low |
H = High = if any of the signaling questions for a domain were answered with ‘no’, potential for bias existed and was graded as high.
L = Low = if all signaling questions for a domain were answered with ‘yes’, the risk of bias was judged as low.
U = Unclear = this category was only used if insufficient data was reported to permit a judgment.
An overview of the different ABI variables to diagnose PAD.
| Index test with threshold | ABI >1·3 included/excluded in study population | Number of studies | Number of patients | PLR | NLR | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ABI < 0·9 | Excluded | 2 | 487 | 8·72-17 | 0·24-0·84 | 17%-78·46% | 91%-99% |
| ABI < 0·9 | Included | 10 | 1801 | 1·22-17 | 0-0·69 | 53%-100% | 42%-95% |
| ABI <0·9 or >1·3-1·4 | Included | 4 | 394 | 1·69-6·17 | 0·44-0·72 | 42·3%-68% | 59%-92·7% |
| ABI < 0·88 | Included | 1 | 76 | 3·29 | 0·53 | 56% | 83% |
| Oscillometric ABI < 0.9 | Included | 1 | 83 | 7·9 | 0·74 | 29% | 96% |
| Oscillometric ABI <0·9 or >1·4 | Included | 1 | 62 | 10·17 | 0·41 | 61% | 94% |
| Lower ABI <0·9 or >1·4 | Included | 1 | 62 | 3·63 | 0·17 | 87% | 76% |
| ABI >1·45 (Only patient with ABI >1·3 were included) | Included | 1 | 175 | 4·33 | 0·41 | 65% | 85% |
| Post-exercise ABI (≤0·9) | Included | 1 | 107 | 3·48 | 0·38 | 69·6% | 80·0% |
| Post-exercise (>20%) reduction compared to resting ABI | Included | 1 | 107 | 1·53 | 0·66 | 59·6% | 61·1% |