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Moderate to Severe Soft Tissue Diabetic Foot Infections
- Source :
- Annals of Surgery. 276:233-238
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.
-
Abstract
- The optimal duration of antibiotic therapy for soft-tissue infections of the diabetic foot remains unknown.We determine if antibiotic therapy after debridement for a short (10 days), compared with a long (20 days), duration for soft-tissue infections of the diabetic foot results in similar rates of clinical remission and adverse events (AE).The optimal duration of systemic antibiotic therapy, after successful debridement, for soft tissue infections of diabetic patients is unknown. Because of the high recurrence risk, overuse is commonplace.This was a randomized, controlled, non-inferiority pilot trial of cases of diabetic foot infection (excluding osteomyelitis) with the primary outcome of "clinical remission at 2-months follow-up".Among 66 enrolled episodes (17% females; median age 71 years), we randomized 35 to the 10-day arm and 31 to the 20-day arm. The median duration of the parenteral antibiotic therapy was 1 day, with the remainder given orally. In the intention-to-treat population, we achieved clinical remission in 27 (77%) patients in the 10-day arm compared to 22 (71%) in the 20-days arm ( P = 0.57). There were a similar proportion in each arm of AE (14/35 versus 11/31; P = 0.71), and remission in the per-protocol population (25/32 vs 18/27; P = 0.32). Overall, 8 soft tissue DFIs in the 10-day arm and 5 cases in the 20-day arm recurred as a new osteomyelitis [8/35 (23%) versus 5/31 (16%); P = 0.53]. Overall, the number of recurrences limited to the soft tissues was 4 (6%). By multivariate analysis, rates of remission (intention-to-treat population, hazard ratio 0.6, 95%CI 0.3-1.1; per-protocol population 0.8, 95%CI 0.4-1.5) and AE were not significantly different with a 10-day compared to 20-day course.In this randomized, controlled pilot trial, post-debridement antibiotic therapy for soft tissue DFI for 10 days gave similar (and non-inferior) rates of remission and AEs to 20 days. A larger confirmatory trial is under way.ClinicalTrials NCT03615807.
- Subjects :
- Male
Moderate to severe
Diabetic foot infections
medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.drug_class
medicine.medical_treatment
Antibiotics
610 Medicine & health
Pilot Projects
Diabetes Mellitus
medicine
Humans
Aged
Debridement
business.industry
Soft Tissue Infections
Pilot trial
Soft tissue
Osteomyelitis
Diabetic Foot
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Surgery
10046 Balgrist University Hospital, Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Center
Female
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00034932
- Volume :
- 276
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Annals of Surgery
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....87840d989a8cff58b22e0af5d72f60af
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0000000000005205