Abstract
Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are common complications of diabetes mellitus (DM), with a complex pathogenesis. Treatment is difficult and no single treatment with measurable clinical impact is available. In the present clinical pilot trial, we investigated whether statins could be of use against some of the pathogenic factors in DFUs. Thirteen diabetic patients (10 men; 11 with Type 2 DM; mean age 64 years; mean duration of DM 18 years) with neuropathic DFUs <4 months were randomized to treatment with either 10 mg (six patients; six ulcers) or 80 mg (seven patients; nine ulcers) atorvastatin for 6 months in addition to conventional DFU care (i.e. prompt debridement, DFU pressure relief, and management of any underlying infection). There were no significant differences in background factors (i.e. HbA1c 8.9%, micro- and macrovascular complications, concomitant medications) or DFU characteristics (duration, surface area, grading) between the two groups. All ulcers in the group receiving 10 mg atorvastatin healed, compared with six of nine ulcers in the group receiving 80 mg atorvastatin (NS). However, two previously healed DFUs recurred and six new DFUs developed in the low-dose group compared with none and one, respectively, in the high-dose group (P = 0.048). There was a significant decrease in C-reactive protein (-1.5 mg/L; P = 0.044) and a non-significant trend towards beneficial effects on lipids and the ankle-arm blood pressure index in the high-dose compared with the low-dose group. We observed a possible beneficial effect of 6-months high-dose atorvastatin on DFUs, which should be tested in appropriately sized prospective studies.
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