Impact of case‐mix adjustment on observed variation in the healing of diabetic foot ulcers at 12 weeks using data from the National Diabetes Foot Care Audit of England and Wales: a cohort study

Yelland, A. C., Meace, C., Knighton, P., Holman, N. , Wild, S. H., Michalowski, J., Young, B. and Jeffcoate, W. J. (2023) Impact of case‐mix adjustment on observed variation in the healing of diabetic foot ulcers at 12 weeks using data from the National Diabetes Foot Care Audit of England and Wales: a cohort study. Diabetic Medicine, 40(1), e14959. (doi: 10.1111/dme.14959) (PMID:36114737)

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Abstract

Aim: This cohort study investigates the extent to which variation in ulcer healing between services can be explained by demographic and clinical characteristics. Methods: The National Diabetes Foot Care Audit collated data on people with diabetic foot ulcers presenting to specialist services in England and Wales between July 2014 and March 2018. Logistic regression models were created to describe associations between risk factors and a person being alive and ulcer-free 12 weeks from presentation, and to investigate whether variation between 120 participating services persisted after risk factor adjustment. Results: Of 27,030 people with valid outcome data, 12,925 (47.8%) were alive and ulcer-free at 12 weeks, 13,745 (50.9%) had an unhealed ulcer and 360 had died (1.3%). Factors associated with worse outcome were male sex, more severe ulcers, history of cardiac or renal disease and a longer time between first presentation to a non-specialist healthcare professional and first expert assessment. After adjustment for these factors, four services (3.3%) were more than 3SD above and seven services (5.8%) were more than 3SD below the national mean for proportions that were alive and ulcer-free at follow-up. Conclusions/Interpretations: Variation in the healing of diabetic foot ulcers between specialist services in England and Wales persisted after adjusting for demographic characteristics, ulcer severity, smoking, body mass index and co-morbidities. We conclude that other factors contribute to variation in healing of diabetic foot ulcers and include the time to specialist assessment.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Holman, Ms Naomi
Authors: Yelland, A. C., Meace, C., Knighton, P., Holman, N., Wild, S. H., Michalowski, J., Young, B., and Jeffcoate, W. J.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Health
Journal Name:Diabetic Medicine
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:0742-3071
ISSN (Online):1464-5491
Published Online:17 September 2022
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2022 Diabetes UK
First Published:First published in Diabetic Medicine 40(1): e14959
Publisher Policy:Reproduced in accordance with the publisher copyright policy

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