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Targeted treatment of invasive fungal infections accelerates healing of foot wounds in patients with Type 2 diabetes

Authors :
G, Chellan
K, Neethu
A K, Varma
T S, Mangalanandan
S, Shashikala
K R, Dinesh
K R, Sundaram
N, Varma
R V, Jayakumar
A, Bal
H, Kumar
Source :
Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association. 29(9)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

To test the hypothesis that fluconazole plus standard care is superior to the standard care for diabetic foot wounds infected with deep-seated fungal infections.We carried out a randomized, controlled, open-label, parallel-arm study in 75 patients with both fungal and bacterial infections in deep tissues of diabetic foot wounds. Thirty-seven patients (control group) were given standard care (surgical debridement + culture-specific antibiotics + offloading + glycaemic control) and 38 patients (treatment group) were given fluconazole 150 mg daily plus standard care. Wound surface area was measured every 2 weeks until the endpoints (complete epithelialization or skin grafting) were met.By week 4, the mean wound surface area reduced to 27.3 from 111.5 cm(2) in the treatment group, as opposed to 67.1 from 87.3 cm(2) in the control group. Subsequently, the mean wound surface areas were remarkably smaller in the treatment group compared with the control group, and statistically significant differences (P ≤ 0.05) in mean wound surface area were observed between the treatment group and the control group at week 6. However, no statistically significant (P ≤ 0.47) difference in complete healing was observed between the treatment group and the control group, 20 vs. 24. The mean wound healing time for the treatment group was 7.3 weeks, whereas for the control group it was 11.3 weeks (P ≤ 0.022). Similarly, the probability of wound healing in the treatment group was 50 vs. 20% in the control group at week 10.Fluconazole plus standard care was superior to standard care alone in accelerating wound reduction among patients with diabetes with deep-seated fungal infections in diabetic foot wounds. Those in the treatment group who did heal, healed more quickly (P ≤ 0.022), but overall healing was not different.

Details

ISSN :
14645491
Volume :
29
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e2db48b3cf4c6a40bbc1a398f9bd8fbe