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Rifampicin in the Treatment of Refractory Diabetic Foot Ulcer and Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis-an Observational Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A nonrandomized open-label study investigated the effectiveness of rifampicin in treating refractory diabetic foot ulcers (rDFU) and osteomyelitis in patients who did not respond to standard antimicrobial therapies for over 3 months.
  • The study involved 67 patients treated with rifampicin alongside conventional antibiotics, compared to a control group of 68 patients receiving only standard treatment, with healing rates and amputation occurrences monitored over 12 months.
  • Results showed a significantly higher healing rate in the rifampicin group (70.1% at 6 months) compared to the control group (36.8%), highlighting rifampicin's potential benefit in managing nonhealing diabetic foot ulcers.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Refractory diabetic foot ulcer (rDFU) and osteomyelitis (diabetic foot osteomyelitis [DFO]) are a major problem in people with diabetes. Often resulting from multidrug-resistant polymicrobial infection, these may result in amputation or nonhealing ulcers. In this nonrandomized open-label study, we looked at the outcome of treatment with rifampicin in patients with nonhealing diabetic foot ulcers.

Material And Methods: Patients with DFUs (n = 67, n = 55 with DFO) unresponsive to conventional antimicrobial therapy for >3 months (rDFU) were taken as the study group. All patients received rifampicin for a minimum of 3 months (maximum 6 months if DUFs did not heal after 3 months) in addition to standard antibiotics and compared with similar kind of DFUs (n = 68, n = 55 DFO) who formed the control group, treated with conventional antimicrobial therapy. Patients were followed up for 12 months. Healing of DFU at 6 months and amputation were primary endpoints of the study.

Results: In total, 43 patients (64.2%) in the rifampicin group healed at 3 months and another 4 patients healed when rifampicin was continued for 6 months (n = 47, 70.1%). In the control group, 11 patients healed at 3 months (16.2%) and 25 patients healed at 6 months (36.8%). In total, 14 patients (20.9%) in the study group and 29 patients (42.6%) in the control group had to undergo minor amputation. Comparison between the rate of healing at 3 and 6 months and minor amputation between the study group and control group showed statistically significant results ( ≤ .00001, <.00001, and .008, respectively). In total, 6 and 8 patients despite healing of the primary ulcer had a subsequent recurrence of ulcer in the rifampicin and control group, respectively.

Conclusion: Rifampicin used in conjunction with other standard poly-microbial therapy in refractory complex diabetic foot ulcer unresponsive to standard antimicrobial therapy, can significantly improve wound healing as well as decrease the need for amputation in addition to standard of care.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15347346241229890DOI Listing

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