The best way to off-load a diabetic foot ulcer
Date First Published:
July 5, 2007
Last Updated:
July 9, 2007
Report by:
Charlotte Houltram, Medical student (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
Charlotte Houltram, Manchester Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In a [diabetic patient with peripheral neuropathy and a plantar foot ulcer] are [instant total contact casts (iTCCs) or traditional total contact casts (TCCs) better] at [reducing joint destruction?]
Clinical Scenario:
A 45 year old male with diabetes, peripheral neuropathy and obesity presents to the emergncy department with a wound to the planter aspect of his left foot. On inspection you find an ulcer roughly 2cm x 2cm which does not appear to be infected. The man tells you it has been there for some time and is gradually enlarging, although it is not painful. You know that off-loading the pressure on the area should help it to heal and wonder what is the best way to do this.
Search Strategy:
(exp diabetes mellitus OR diabetic neuropathies OR exp diabetic foot OR arthropathy) AND (total contact cast.mp. OR TCC.mp. OR removable cast walker.mp. OR RCW.mp.) LIMIT to humans and English language
Search Details:
Medline from 1950 to June 2007 using the Ovid interface and Embase from 1996 to week 25 2007
Outcome:
The search located 79 articles, 2 of which were relevant.
Relevant Paper(s):
| Study Title | Patient Group | Study type (level of evidence) | Outcomes | Key results | Study Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A randomized trial of two irremovable off-loading devices in the management of plantar neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers. Katz IA et al 2005 UK | 41 consecutive diabetic patients with chronic, non-ischaemic, neuropathic plantar foot ulcers | Randomized clinical trial | The proportion of patients with ulcers that healed at 9less than or equivalent to) 12 weeks | The proportions of patients with ulcers that healed within 12 weeks in the iTCC and TCC groups were 945 AND 935 respectively (once patients lost to follow up were excluded) | There is a small sample size and blinding couldnt be used |
| healing rates | Healing rates were statistically significant in the two groups | ||||
| complication rates | Complication rates were statistically significant within the two groups | ||||
| cast placement/removal times | The i TCC took considerably less time to place and remove than the TCC with 39% and 36% reductions, respectively | ||||
| costs | There was an overall lower cost associated with the use of the iTCC compared with the TCC | ||||
| An off-the-shelf contact casting device for the management of diabetic foot ulcers: a randomized prospective trial versus traditional fiberglass cast Piaggesi A et al 2007 USA | 40 diabetic out-patients attending foot clinic randomized to TCC or iTCC treatment. | A randomized prospective trial | Healing rates at 12 weeks | There was no difference observed in healing rates at 12 weeks (95% in the TCC group and 85% in the iTCC group) | This was a small trial and blinding was not possible |
| Number and severity of adverse events | There was no significant difference in the number of adverse events (6 in the TCC group compared to 4 in the iTCC group) | ||||
| Costs | The iTCC was significantly less expensive than the TCC (a mean reduction of costs of 78%) | ||||
| Applicability of the device | The iTCC was a 77 and 58% reduction in the time required for application and removal of the devices respectively (P=0.001) | ||||
| Patient satisfaction | Patient satisfaction was higher in the iTCC group (P=0.01) | ||||
| Healing time | There was no significant difference in healing time (6.5 in the TCC group compared to 6.7 in the iTCC group) |
Author Commentary:
The evidence shows that iTCCs are as good at healing ulceration as TCCs are, with no additional adverse events. However, they are preferable to TCCs as they are easier to apply/remove, cheaper and better tolerated by the patient.
Bottom Line:
iTCCs should be the off-loading methoed of choice for a diabetic patient with an ulcerated neuropathic foot; especially in the emergency department where TCCs are not available.
References:
- Katz IA et al. A randomized trial of two irremovable off-loading devices in the management of plantar neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers.
- Piaggesi A et al. An off-the-shelf contact casting device for the management of diabetic foot ulcers: a randomized prospective trial versus traditional fiberglass cast
