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UA surgeon armstrong urges new focus on diabetic ulcers

University of Arizona Health News Jul 07, 2017

Remission – rather than repair – needs to be the goal of treatment, according to new report. Dr. David Armstrong, professor of surgery and director of the Southern Arizona Limb Salvage Alliance at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, says extending patients' ulcer–free days using treatment and prevention is essential, according to a report from Armstrong and his co–authors.

The manuscript appeared in the June 15 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

"This paper is the first of its kind to call attention to remission," says Armstrong, also a member of the BIO5 Institute. "The word 'remission' has been mentioned in the literature over the last few years. But this is the loudest call yet, and more than any other work before, it lays out data in a way that sort of flips the script from healing to what we do in between healed wounds."

Indications of diabetic foot ulcers include a lessened ability to feel pain coupled with repetitive stress on specific areas of the foot. Once healed, as many as 40 percent of patients will have recurrence of some kind in a year. This rises to three–quarters of patients by five years.

Armstrong likens diabetes to cancer because the morbidity and mortality are similar. But clinicians have yet to treat diabetes like cancer, he says.

"Diabetes can be more significant than many forms of cancer," Armstrong says. "This is a concept that's misaligned right now in medicine. As we move toward diseases of decay, as I call them – things like cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes – our goal as physicians, surgeons, scientists and policymakers is to delay that decay."

Diabetes is unique, Armstrong says, because people can unknowingly injure themselves. "People can wear a hole in their foot just as you or I might wear a hole in a sock," he says. "These sores are covered up by a shoe or a sock, and very often a person with diabetes may feel little or no pain."

But developing a diabetic foot ulcer means a person's chances of living an additional 10 years are half that of someone who has not developed one, Armstrong says. What's more, foot ulcers and infections dramatically increase a person's chances of being admitted to the hospital.

"We looked at the data from 5 billion outpatient visits and found that diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic foot infections were astonishingly high–risk factors for hospitalization," Armstrong says. According to the study in the New England Journal of Medicine and cited in the May issue of the journal Diabetes Care, the admission rate was comparable to, or exceeding, that of congestive heart failure, kidney disease, depression and most types of cancer.

To realign the way in which diabetes is viewed and treated, Armstrong says physicians must begin talking with their patients about severe complications, the way they talk with their patients about cancer, and emphasize that with new technologies and continuous care, such as careful dosing of physical activity, remission can be prolonged.

"The real idea here is for physicians to help people move through their world a little better and give them more ulcer–free days and more activity–rich days," Armstrong says. "We want to keep our patients moving, so they’re not on the sidelines of life."
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