AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study examined the effectiveness of existing wound classification systems (Wagner, Texas, PEDIS, WIfI) in predicting treatment outcomes for patients with limb-threatening diabetic foot ulcers.
  • - Out of 1548 patients studied, 9.9% underwent major amputations, and 2.5% died, with significant findings highlighting the importance of factors like comorbid cardiac issues and serum levels of C-reactive protein and albumin for prognosis.
  • - The Wagner and Texas classifications were found to be valid for predicting outcomes, with specific predictors varying between patients with and without dialysis, indicating the complexity of managing this condition.

Article Abstract

This study aims to investigate whether the current wound classifications were valid for the treatment prognosis of subjects treated for limb-threatening diabetic foot ulcers (LTDFU). A total of 1548 patients with LTDFU and infection were studied, with wounds recorded using the Wagner, Texas, PEDIS and WIfI classifications while major lower extremity amputations (LEAs) or in-hospital mortality incidences were defined as poor outcomes. Among them, 153 (9.9%) patients received major LEAs and 38 (2.5%) patients died. After adjustments, the Wagner classification and Texas stage as well as clinical factors such as comorbidity with major adverse cardiac events (MACE), being under dialysis and having serum levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) and albumin were independent factors for prognosis. For patients without dialysis, Wagner and Texas stage stood out independently for prognosis. For patients on dialysis, only levels of CRP (odds ratio [OR] = 2.2 in Wagner, OR = 2.0 in WIfI, OR = 2.2 in Texas, OR = 2.3 in PEDIS) and albumin (OR = 0.4 in four classifications) were valid predictors. The Wagner system and Texas stage were valid for predicting prognosis in treatment for LTDFUs, suggesting a role of vascular perfusion. MACE history, levels of CRP and albumin level should assist in prediction; more significantly, only levels of CRP and albumin appeared valid for those subjects undergoing dialysis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10777762PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/iwj.14338DOI Listing

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