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局部抗微生物製劑用於治療糖尿病患者足部潰瘍

Background

People with diabetes are at high risk for developing foot ulcers, which often become infected. These wounds, especially when infected, cause substantial morbidity. Wound treatments should aim to alleviate symptoms, promote healing, and avoid adverse outcomes, especially lower extremity amputation. Topical antimicrobial therapy has been used on diabetic foot ulcers, either as a treatment for clinically infected wounds, or to prevent infection in clinically uninfected wounds.

Objectives

To evaluate the effects of treatment with topical antimicrobial agents on: the resolution of signs and symptoms of infection; the healing of infected diabetic foot ulcers; and preventing infection and improving healing in clinically uninfected diabetic foot ulcers.

Search methods

We searched the Cochrane Wounds Specialised Register, CENTRAL, Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid MEDLINE (In‐Process & Other Non‐Indexed Citations), Ovid Embase, and EBSCO CINAHL Plus in August 2016. We also searched clinical trials registries for ongoing and unpublished studies, and checked reference lists to identify additional studies. We used no restrictions with respect to language, date of publication, or study setting.

Selection criteria

We included randomised controlled trials conducted in any setting (inpatient or outpatient) that evaluated topical treatment with any type of solid or liquid (e.g., cream, gel, ointment) antimicrobial agent, including antiseptics, antibiotics, and antimicrobial dressings, in people with diabetes mellitus who were diagnosed with an ulcer or open wound of the foot, whether clinically infected or uninfected.

Data collection and analysis

Two review authors independently performed study selection, 'Risk of bias' assessment, and data extraction. Initial disagreements were resolved by discussion, or by including a third review author when necessary.

Main results

We found 22 trials that met our inclusion criteria with a total of over 2310 participants (one study did not report number of participants). The included studies mostly had small numbers of participants (from 4 to 317) and relatively short follow‐up periods (4 to 24 weeks). At baseline, six trials included only people with ulcers that were clinically infected; one trial included people with both infected and uninfected ulcers; two trials included people with non‐infected ulcers; and the remaining 13 studies did not report infection status.

Included studies employed various topical antimicrobial treatments, including antimicrobial dressings (e.g. silver, iodides), super‐oxidised aqueous solutions, zinc hyaluronate, silver sulphadiazine, tretinoin, pexiganan cream, and chloramine. We performed the following five comparisons based on the included studies:

Antimicrobial dressings compared with non‐antimicrobial dressings: Pooled data from five trials with a total of 945 participants suggest (based on the average treatment effect from a random‐effects model) that more wounds may heal when treated with an antimicrobial dressing than with a non‐antimicrobial dressing: risk ratio (RR) 1.28, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.12 to 1.45. These results correspond to an additional 119 healing events in the antimicrobial‐dressing arm per 1000 participants (95% CI 51 to 191 more). We consider this low‐certainty evidence (downgraded twice due to risk of bias). The evidence on adverse events or other outcomes was uncertain (very low‐certainty evidence, frequently downgraded due to risk of bias and imprecision).

Antimicrobial topical treatments (non dressings) compared with non‐antimicrobial topical treatments (non dressings): There were four trials with a total of 132 participants in this comparison that contributed variously to the estimates of outcome data. Evidence was generally of low or very low certainty, and the 95% CIs spanned benefit and harm: proportion of wounds healed RR 2.82 (95% CI 0.56 to 14.23; 112 participants; 3 trials; very low‐certainty evidence); achieving resolution of infection RR 1.16 (95% CI 0.54 to 2.51; 40 participants; 1 trial; low‐certainty evidence); undergoing surgical resection RR 1.67 (95% CI 0.47 to 5.90; 40 participants; 1 trial; low‐certainty evidence); and sustaining an adverse event (no events in either arm; 81 participants; 2 trials; very low‐certainty evidence).

Comparison of different topical antimicrobial treatments: We included eight studies with a total of 250 participants, but all of the comparisons were different and no data could be appropriately pooled. Reported outcome data were limited and we are uncertain about the relative effects of antimicrobial topical agents for each of our review outcomes for this comparison, that is wound healing, resolution of infection, surgical resection, and adverse events (all very low‐certainty evidence).

Topical antimicrobials compared with systemic antibiotics : We included four studies with a total of 937 participants. These studies reported no wound‐healing data, and the evidence was uncertain for the relative effects on resolution of infection in infected ulcers and surgical resection (very low certainty). On average, there is probably little difference in the risk of adverse events between the compared topical antimicrobial and systemic antibiotics treatments: RR 0.91 (95% CI 0.78 to 1.06; moderate‐certainty evidence ‐ downgraded once for inconsistency).

Topical antimicrobial agents compared with growth factor: We included one study with 40 participants. The only review‐relevant outcome reported was number of ulcers healed, and these data were uncertain (very low‐certainty evidence).

Authors' conclusions

The randomised controlled trial data on the effectiveness and safety of topical antimicrobial treatments for diabetic foot ulcers is limited by the availability of relatively few, mostly small, and often poorly designed trials. Based on our systematic review and analysis of the literature, we suggest that: 1) use of an antimicrobial dressing instead of a non‐antimicrobial dressing may increase the number of diabetic foot ulcers healed over a medium‐term follow‐up period (low‐certainty evidence); and 2) there is probably little difference in the risk of adverse events related to treatment between systemic antibiotics and topical antimicrobial treatments based on the available studies (moderate‐certainty evidence). For each of the other outcomes we examined there were either no reported data or the available data left us uncertain as to whether or not there were any differences between the compared treatments. Given the high, and increasing, frequency of diabetic foot wounds, we encourage investigators to undertake properly designed randomised controlled trials in this area to evaluate the effects of topical antimicrobial treatments for both the prevention and the treatment of infection in these wounds and ultimately the effects on wound healing.

PICO

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

El uso y la enseñanza del modelo PICO están muy extendidos en el ámbito de la atención sanitaria basada en la evidencia para formular preguntas y estrategias de búsqueda y para caracterizar estudios o metanálisis clínicos. PICO son las siglas en inglés de cuatro posibles componentes de una pregunta de investigación: paciente, población o problema; intervención; comparación; desenlace (outcome).

Para saber más sobre el uso del modelo PICO, puede consultar el Manual Cochrane.

局部抗微生物製劑(直接使用於傷口上的抗生素產品)用於治療糖尿病患者足部潰瘍

文獻回顧問題

我們回顧了有關糖尿病患者使用抗微生物製劑(抗生素產品),是否能預防或治療其足部感染之相關的證據。我們希望能了解抗微生物製劑是否能夠促進感染性或非感染性的傷口的癒合,以及預防非感染性的傷口產生感染。

背景

糖尿病患者是足部潰瘍的高風險群,此類的傷口會造成病人的不適,而且容易導致感染。而癒合不佳的糖尿病足部潰瘍更可能會導致糖尿病患部份或全部的足部、甚至是下肢的截肢。抗微生物製劑(抗菌劑或抗生素)能抑制細菌的生長,所以有時候會用來治療糖尿病患足部的潰瘍傷口。抗微生物製劑可能會被運用於減少感染或者幫助感染性傷口癒合,或是預防感染或幫助還沒有明顯感染症狀的傷口癒合。我們想要了解抗微生物製劑對於糖尿病足部潰瘍治療成效、何種製劑最有效、以及使用此藥物是否可能造成不良副作用。

研究特點

我們在2016年8月時搜尋了關於使用抗微生物製劑來治療糖尿病患者足部潰瘍或開放性傷口的隨機對照試驗。我們共找到22個相關研究,共包含2310位成人受試者(其中1個試驗沒有提供受試者的人數)。這些試驗的受試者人數以及其追蹤的時間為:4位至317位受試者,追蹤期間由4周至24周。有些試驗所納入的受試者其潰瘍有感染,有一些試驗所納入的受試者其潰瘍則是沒有感染的。這些納入的臨床試驗比較了不同類型的抗微生物製劑,包含了敷料、溶液、凝膠、乳液或藥膏。

主要結果

多數試驗未報告重要數據,導致其研究的信度無法確認。其中有5個研究(共包含945位受試者,追踪期間4‐24週)指出和未使用敷料者比較,使用某些類型的抗微生物敷料可能可以幫助潰瘍傷口癒合(低證據確定性),但是因為資訊有限,所以本文無法明確評估敷料對於預防或幫助傷口感染的成效。有4個共包含937位受試者的試驗,比較了全身性抗生素(口服、針劑藥物,可進入血液循環)及抗微生物製劑(直接使用於傷口)對於傷口的效用,這些試驗雖然沒有提供對於傷口癒合或感染成效的數據,但比較全身性抗生素和局部抗微生物製劑所導致的副作用並沒有有明顯差異(中等證據確定性)。

證據品質

整體而言,這些試驗所提供的證據確定性太低,所以無法確認將局部抗微生物製劑應用於治療糖尿病患足部潰瘍之益處及害處。未來應多執行大樣本數、良好研究設計的隨機對照試驗來探討這個問題。