Abstract

BackgroundThe prevalence of diabetes mellitus continues to rise. Diabetic foot ulcers with osteomyelitis are a diabetes-related complication presenting a significant burden to this cohort. A cure to diabetic foot osteomyelitis remains elusive and standard of care has failed to improve outcomes. To advance research and better patient outcomes, the authors offer specific guidance with terminology to enhance operative dictations which may improve surgical practice and guide treatment.MethodsA consecutive review of podiatric surgical dictations for inpatient diabetic foot osteomyelitis within a tertiary care facility was performed. Surgical descriptors of bone were standardized: density, anatomic structure, vascular thrombosis, color, and draining sinus. Correlations between the five categories and histopathological results were performed after kappa analysis for interrater reliability was performed.ResultsKappa coefficient demonstrated high inter-reliability of surgical findings. This suggests potential agreement amongst surgeons performing similar procedures. It was also found that specific bone descriptors had moderate to strong correlation with clean histopathologic bone margins when biopsied. This further suggests that the use of standardized terms may help guide definitive therapy.ConclusionsThe authors suggest a standardized approach which includes consistent descriptors of intraoperative bone. With use of standardized terms, vague and blanket descriptors are eliminated. This has potential to improve understanding of changes within bone as a result of infection and diabetes. Early and improved communication of intraoperative findings will enhance the multidisciplinary approach. This could potentially lead to changes in diabetic foot management and may limit hospital waste waiting for final cultures and pathology reports.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of diabetes mellitus continues to rise

  • The 2012 Infectious Diseases Society of America [IDSA] Diabetic Foot Infection Classification system and Clinical Practice Guideline is a common reference used by physicians to determine treatment options [5]

  • Correlations with the IDSA classification system suggest 10–15% of moderate infections proceed to diabetic foot osteomyelitis (DFO), while 50% of severe infections proceed to DFO (Table 1) [5, 6]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of diabetes mellitus continues to rise. Diabetic foot ulcers with osteomyelitis are a diabetes-related complication presenting a significant burden to this cohort. To advance research and better patient outcomes, the authors offer specific guidance with terminology to enhance operative dictations which may improve surgical practice and guide treatment. It is estimated 34.2 million people in the United States have Diabetes Mellitus (DM) [1]. 15–25% of diabetics will develop a diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) [2]. Further estimations suggest between 40 and 80% of DFU become infected [3]. Infections vary in severity, but approximately 20% of DFU with soft tissue infection progress to diabetic foot osteomyelitis (DFO) [4]. Correlations with the IDSA classification system suggest 10–15% of moderate infections proceed to DFO, while 50% of severe infections proceed to DFO (Table 1) [5, 6]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call