Effectiveness of screening for foot complications in people with diabetes – A systematic review

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q3 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Journal of diabetes and its complications Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.1016/j.jdiacomp.2024.108865
Aleksandra Staniszewska , Amy Jones , Sarah Rudd , Frank de Vocht , Robert Hinchliffe
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Abstract

Background

A quarter of people with diabetes develop foot ulcer in their lifetime and are six times more likely to require a major lower limb amputation compared to the general population. Risk stratification tools can reliably identify those at the highest risk of ulceration, but it remains unclear if screening for foot complications can prevent limb loss in people with diabetes.

Aims

The aim of this systematic review was to determine whether population-based foot screening in people with diabetes reduces lower limb complications as assessed by development of foot ulceration, minor and major lower limb amputations, hospitalisation, or death.

Methods

MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare and CINAHL databases were searched to identify randomised and non-randomised controlled trials and observational studies (cohort, case-control and cross-sectional surveys). The screening process, study quality assessment and data extraction were performed by two independent reviewers.

Results

Following abstract screening and assessment for eligibility, five out of 10,771 identified studies were included in the analysis. Of these studies, one demonstrated 24 % reduction in development of new ulceration following introduction of screening. Major amputations decreased by between 17 and 96 % in three studies. Hospitalisation rates were contradictory, with one study showing doubling in hospital admissions and another one reduction by 33 %. One study demonstrated no impact of screening on minor or major amputation rates. None of the studies addressed the effect of foot screening on all-cause mortality.

Conclusions

The number and quality of studies to support population-based foot screening to prevent lower limb complications in people with diabetes is low. Current evidence suggests variable impact of screening on important clinical outcomes.

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糖尿病患者足部并发症筛查的有效性--系统性综述
背景四分之一的糖尿病患者在其一生中会出现足部溃疡,与普通人群相比,他们需要进行下肢大截肢的几率要高出六倍。风险分层工具可以可靠地识别出溃疡风险最高的人群,但目前仍不清楚足部并发症筛查能否预防糖尿病患者的肢体损失。目的 本系统性综述旨在确定糖尿病患者的足部筛查是否能减少下肢并发症,其评估指标包括足部溃疡、轻度和重度下肢截肢、住院或死亡。方法检索了MEDLINE、Embase、Emcare和CINAHL数据库,以确定随机和非随机对照试验以及观察性研究(队列、病例对照和横断面调查)。筛选过程、研究质量评估和数据提取由两名独立审稿人完成。结果经过摘要筛选和资格评估,10771 项已确定的研究中有 5 项纳入了分析。在这些研究中,有一项研究表明,在引入筛查后,新发溃疡减少了 24%。在三项研究中,重大截肢减少了 17% 到 96%。住院率则存在矛盾,一项研究显示住院率增加了一倍,而另一项研究则减少了 33%。一项研究表明,筛查对轻度或重度截肢率没有影响。没有一项研究涉及足部筛查对全因死亡率的影响。结论:支持通过足部筛查预防糖尿病患者下肢并发症的研究数量少、质量低。目前的证据表明,筛查对重要临床结果的影响各不相同。
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来源期刊
Journal of diabetes and its complications
Journal of diabetes and its complications 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
3.30%
发文量
153
审稿时长
16 days
期刊介绍: Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications (JDC) is a journal for health care practitioners and researchers, that publishes original research about the pathogenesis, diagnosis and management of diabetes mellitus and its complications. JDC also publishes articles on physiological and molecular aspects of glucose homeostasis. The primary purpose of JDC is to act as a source of information usable by diabetes practitioners and researchers to increase their knowledge about mechanisms of diabetes and complications development, and promote better management of people with diabetes who are at risk for those complications. Manuscripts submitted to JDC can report any aspect of basic, translational or clinical research as well as epidemiology. Topics can range broadly from early prediabetes to late-stage complicated diabetes. Topics relevant to basic/translational reports include pancreatic islet dysfunction and insulin resistance, altered adipose tissue function in diabetes, altered neuronal control of glucose homeostasis and mechanisms of drug action. Topics relevant to diabetic complications include diabetic retinopathy, neuropathy and nephropathy; peripheral vascular disease and coronary heart disease; gastrointestinal disorders, renal failure and impotence; and hypertension and hyperlipidemia.
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