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The impact of diabetes in intermittent claudication: a prospective cohort study

The impact of diabetes in intermittent claudication: a prospective cohort study
The impact of diabetes in intermittent claudication: a prospective cohort study

The aim of this study was to determine the lower-limb outcome in patients with intermittent claudication (IC) and to identify predictors for deterioration. This study employed a prospective observational cohort single-centre design. One hundred fifty patients with IC attending a vascular surgery unit for the first time were recruited. Lower limb perfusion was assessed utilising ankle brachial index (ABI) measures, toe-brachial index (TBI) measures, Doppler waveform analysis and the walking impairment questionnaire. Follow-up was conducted after 1 year and 2 years following recruitment to assess haemodynamic parameters, symptom severity and outcome. Recruited participants had a mean age of 69.7 (±9.3) years, BMI 27.8(±4.2) and 79.3% were men. Significant haemodynamic decline (decline in ABPI by ≥0.15 and/or decline in TBPI by ≥0.1) occurred in 50.6% of the cohort within 2 years of whom 23.3% developed chronic limb threatening ischaemia (CLTI) with rest pain and/or tissue loss. Baseline ABPI, ABPI ≤ 0.5, TBPI ≤ 0.39, infrapopliteal artery (IPA) disease and high Haemoglobin A1c were identified as significant predictors for deterioration to CLI. (P <.05, binomial logistic regression). Patients with IC are at a high risk of developing CLTI within 2 years. Risk of lower limb adverse events is tripled in patients with IPA disease, low ankle and toe pressures and poorly controlled diabetes. Early identification of those at high risk for early deterioration may justify a paradigm shift in the management of this subgroup.

ABI/ABPI diagnosis, TBI/TBPI, intermittent claudication, revascularisation wound management, vascular diagnosis
1534-7346
Mizzi, Anabelle
bfdf628a-5c66-45a1-bed9-4c3a70717683
Cassar, Kevin
72f34936-86f3-404f-882a-4df66db42ba1
Bowen, Catherine J.
fd85c3c5-96d9-49b8-86c6-caa94e1a222b
Camilleri, Liberato
16d84573-d74b-411c-8a95-66df35b99865
Formosa, Cynthia
07fc4730-7508-44a5-a76b-69e55134a641
Mizzi, Anabelle
bfdf628a-5c66-45a1-bed9-4c3a70717683
Cassar, Kevin
72f34936-86f3-404f-882a-4df66db42ba1
Bowen, Catherine J.
fd85c3c5-96d9-49b8-86c6-caa94e1a222b
Camilleri, Liberato
16d84573-d74b-411c-8a95-66df35b99865
Formosa, Cynthia
07fc4730-7508-44a5-a76b-69e55134a641

Mizzi, Anabelle, Cassar, Kevin, Bowen, Catherine J., Camilleri, Liberato and Formosa, Cynthia (2022) The impact of diabetes in intermittent claudication: a prospective cohort study. The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds. (doi:10.1177/15347346221142189).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine the lower-limb outcome in patients with intermittent claudication (IC) and to identify predictors for deterioration. This study employed a prospective observational cohort single-centre design. One hundred fifty patients with IC attending a vascular surgery unit for the first time were recruited. Lower limb perfusion was assessed utilising ankle brachial index (ABI) measures, toe-brachial index (TBI) measures, Doppler waveform analysis and the walking impairment questionnaire. Follow-up was conducted after 1 year and 2 years following recruitment to assess haemodynamic parameters, symptom severity and outcome. Recruited participants had a mean age of 69.7 (±9.3) years, BMI 27.8(±4.2) and 79.3% were men. Significant haemodynamic decline (decline in ABPI by ≥0.15 and/or decline in TBPI by ≥0.1) occurred in 50.6% of the cohort within 2 years of whom 23.3% developed chronic limb threatening ischaemia (CLTI) with rest pain and/or tissue loss. Baseline ABPI, ABPI ≤ 0.5, TBPI ≤ 0.39, infrapopliteal artery (IPA) disease and high Haemoglobin A1c were identified as significant predictors for deterioration to CLI. (P <.05, binomial logistic regression). Patients with IC are at a high risk of developing CLTI within 2 years. Risk of lower limb adverse events is tripled in patients with IPA disease, low ankle and toe pressures and poorly controlled diabetes. Early identification of those at high risk for early deterioration may justify a paradigm shift in the management of this subgroup.

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IJLEW Final_Dec 2022 - Accepted Manuscript
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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2022
Keywords: ABI/ABPI diagnosis, TBI/TBPI, intermittent claudication, revascularisation wound management, vascular diagnosis

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Local EPrints ID: 474024
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474024
ISSN: 1534-7346
PURE UUID: d167ec93-fa7e-4654-a84e-f22ca81b99b8
ORCID for Catherine J. Bowen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7252-9515

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Date deposited: 09 Feb 2023 17:43
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Anabelle Mizzi
Author: Kevin Cassar
Author: Liberato Camilleri
Author: Cynthia Formosa

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