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Incidence and causes of major amputation in patients with diabetic foot ulcers: data from a retrospective study

Marco Meloni, Luigi Uccioli, Aikaterini Andreadi, Laura Giurato, Valeria Ruotolo, Maria Fiammetta Romano, A Minasi, Ermanno Bellizzi, F Bonanni, Martina Salvi, Alfonso Bellia, Davide Lauro

2025Acta Diabetologica7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: The study aimed to evaluate the rate and causes of major amputation in patients with diabetic foot syndrome. METHODS: The current study is a retrospective observational study including consecutive patients referred to a tertiary-level diabetic foot service from January 2020 to November 2023 due to a new diabetic foot problem requiring hospital admission. All patients had been managed by a multi-disciplinary diabetic foot team (MDFT) through a pre-set limb salvage protocol including the management of peripheral arterial disease, infection, foot offloading, and comorbidities. At 1 year of follow-up, the following outcomes measures were evaluated: rate of major amputation, clinical characteristics of amputees, and causes of major amputation. RESULTS: Overall, 1226 patients referring for a diabetic foot problem and requiring hospitalization were screened for the study. Among them, 30 (2.4%) patients experienced major amputation. Amputees had 69.9±10.7 years, the majority were male (73.3%) with a prevalence of type 2 diabetes (93.3%) and a long diabetes duration (25.2±9.8 years). They showed several comorbidities such as ischaemic heart disease (83.3%), heart failure (46.7%), end-stage-renal-disease (26.7%), and in addition high rate of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) (86.7%), infected wounds (98.3%), and osteomyelitis (90%). Major amputation was mainly related to untreatable limb ischemia (failure of revascularization procedure) in 56.7% of cases, calcaneus osteomyelitis and necrotizing fasciitis in 16.7% of cases, and tarsal osteomyelitis in 10% of cases. CONCLUSIONS: The rate of major amputation was very low in this population managed by a MDFT. PAD was the main cause of major amputation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAmputationDiabetic footOsteomyelitisDiabetes mellitusRetrospective cohort studySurgeryCritical limb ischemiaIncidence (geometry)RevascularizationInternal medicineVascular diseaseArterial diseaseMyocardial infarctionPhysicsOpticsEndocrinologyDiabetic Foot Ulcer Assessment and ManagementPeripheral Artery Disease ManagementSkin Diseases and Diabetes
Incidence and causes of major amputation in patients with diabetic foot ulcers: data from a retrospective study | Litcius