Predicting Foot Salvageability in Diabetic Foot Lesion: Comparison of Benin Diabetic Foot Severity Score and Wagner System
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BACKGROUND: A diabetic foot lesion is a disabling and chronic complication of diabetes mellitus. It has been found to be relatively common in the University of Benin Teaching Hospital Benin City. An aid for making decision on choice, modality of treatment and prognostication is needful in the management of diabetic foot lesion. Such aid would be more purposeful if at the outset it can state which foot would be salvaged or not. Foot salvageability implies maximal preservation of the foot and avoidance of above ankle amputation. The aim of this study was to compare two classification systems as predictors of foot salvageability in diabetic foot lesion: The Wagner Diabetic Foot Severity Score (WDFSS) and Benin Diabetic Foot Severity Score (BDFSS).
METHODOLOGY: A total of 65 patients with diabetic foot lesions admitted in the medical or surgical wards of the UBTH, Benin City, were recruited into the study. All the subjects were diagnosed diabetic using fasting blood sugar value of at least 7mmol/L or higher. Before treatment, the researcher personally examined each patient’s diabetic foot lesion and classified them using both WDFSS and BDFSS. Thereafter, patients were treated with antibiotics based on bacteriological studies, blood sugar control and wound care using basic surgical principles. Daily wound dressing was done using normal saline. During the period of treatment, the patients were evaluated by the researcher at 2 weekly intervals, using the WDFSS and BDFSS. The desired outcomes of treatment included successful foot salvage (avoidance of amputation above the ankle) or failure to salvage the foot ending in below knee amputation. Age, sex, duration of diabetes mellitus, clinical findings of the diabetic foot lesion such as skin colour, ulcer grade, sensation and presence or absence of peripheral pulses, radiological features of the foot and ankle were all documented. The outcome of treatment based on the stage or state of the foot lesion was also noted. The data obtained was analyzed as both descriptive and inferential methods using SPSS version 20.0 statistical software. Logical argument and Receiver Operating Curve were also used.
RESULTS: BDFSS had greater AUC of 0.928 than WDFSS with AUC of 0.78. BDFSS recorded a higher degree of 95% confidence interval of 85% to 99% as against WDFSS with 95% confidence interval of 66% to 90%. Also, BDFSS recorded a higher sensitivity 95% as against WDFSS with sensitivity of 79%. Additionally, BDFSS has a greater Specificity of 87% as against WDFSS with Specificity of 73%. A bivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to assess which characteristic and clinical variables were independently associated with outcome using variables with P< 0.01 according to the univariate analysis.
CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that the BDFSS has acceptable accuracy and capacity for predicting diabetic foot lesion outcome. BDFSS in this study was found to be comparable to the WDFSS thereby making it a useful tool in clinical practice and research both for the anticipation of health care cost and for comparing patient subgroups.
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