Interventions in the management of diabetes‐related foot infections: A systematic review

Author:

Peters Edgar J. G.123ORCID,Albalawi Zaina4,van Asten Suzanne A.5,Abbas Zulfiqarali G.6,Allison Geneve7,Aragón‐Sánchez Javier8,Embil John M.9,Lavery Lawrence A.10,Alhasan Majdi11,Oz Orhan12,Uçkay Ilker13,Urbančič‐Rovan Vilma1415,Xu Zhang‐Rong16,Senneville Éric1718ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Department of Internal Medicine Section of Infectious Diseases Amsterdam The Netherlands

2. Amsterdam Movement Sciences Rehabilitation and Development Amsterdam The Netherlands

3. Amsterdam Infection & Immunity Infectious Diseases Amsterdam The Netherlands

4. Division of Endocrinology Department of Medicine Memorial University St. John's Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

5. Department of Medical Microbiology Leiden University Medical Centre Leiden The Netherlands

6. Abbas Medical Centre Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences Dar es Salaam Tanzania

7. Department of Medicine Tufts Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

8. Department of Surgery La Paloma Hospital Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Spain

9. Alberta Public Laboratories University of Alberta Hospital Edmonton Alberta Canada

10. Department of Plastic Surgery Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

11. Department of Medicine Prisma Health‐Midlands Columbia South Carolina USA

12. Department of Radiology UT Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

13. Department of Infectious Diseases Balgrist University Hospital Zurich Switzerland

14. Faculty of Medicine University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia

15. University Medical Centre Ljubljana Slovenia

16. Diabetes Centre The 306th Hospital of PLA Beijing China

17. Department of Infectious Diseases Gustave Dron Hospital Tourcoing France

18. Univ‐Lille Lille France

Abstract

AbstractThe optimal approaches to managing diabetic foot infections remain a challenge for clinicians. Despite an exponential rise in publications investigating different treatment strategies, the various agents studied generally produce comparable results, and high‐quality data are scarce. In this systematic review, we searched the medical literature using the PubMed and Embase databases for published studies on the treatment of diabetic foot infections from 30 June 2018 to 30 June 2022. We combined this search with our previous literature search of a systematic review performed in 2020, in which the infection committee of the International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot searched the literature until June 2018. We defined the context of the literature by formulating clinical questions of interest, then developing structured clinical questions (Patients‐Intervention‐Control‐Outcomes) to address these. We only included data from controlled studies of an intervention to prevent or cure a diabetic foot infection. Two independent reviewers selected articles for inclusion and then assessed their relevant outcomes and methodological quality. Our literature search identified a total of 5,418 articles, of which we selected 32 for full‐text review. Overall, the newly available studies we identified since 2018 do not significantly modify the body of the 2020 statements for the interventions in the management of diabetes‐related foot infections. The recent data confirm that outcomes in patients treated with the different antibiotic regimens for both skin and soft tissue infection and osteomyelitis of the diabetes‐related foot are broadly equivalent across studies, with a few exceptions (tigecycline not non‐inferior to ertapenem [±vancomycin]). The newly available data suggest that antibiotic therapy following surgical debridement for moderate or severe infections could be reduced to 10 days and to 3 weeks for osteomyelitis following surgical debridement of bone. Similar outcomes were reported in studies comparing primarily surgical and predominantly antibiotic treatment strategies in selected patients with diabetic foot osteomyelitis. There is insufficient high‐quality evidence to assess the effect of various recent adjunctive therapies, such as cold plasma for infected foot ulcers and bioactive glass for osteomyelitis. Our updated systematic review confirms a trend to a better quality of the most recent trials and the need for further well‐designed trials to produce higher quality evidence to underpin our recommendations.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference88 articles.

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