BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care (Apr 2020)

Comparison of a new versus standard removable offloading device in patients with neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers: a French national, multicentre, open-label randomized, controlled trial

  • Louis Potier,
  • Maud François,
  • Dured Dardari,
  • Marilyne Feron,
  • Narimene Belhatem,
  • Estelle Nobecourt-Dupuy,
  • Manuel Dolz,
  • Lyse Bordier,
  • Roxane Ducloux,
  • Abdelkader Chibani,
  • Dominique-François Eveno,
  • Teresa Crea Avila,
  • Ariane Sultan,
  • Laurence Baillet-Blanco,
  • Vincent Rigalleau,
  • Elise Gand,
  • Pierre-Jean Saulnier,
  • Gilberto Velho,
  • Ronan Roussel,
  • Quentin Pellenc,
  • Jean-Claude Dupré,
  • Dominique Malgrange,
  • Kamel Mohammedi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjdrc-2019-000954
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Introduction The offloading is crucial to heal neuropathic diabetic foot ulcer (DFU). Removable offloading are the most used devices. Orthèse diabète is a new customized removable knee-high offloading device immobilizing foot and ankle joints, with some specific and innovative features that may improve offloading. We aimed to evaluate the efficiency of this device in DFU healing.Research, design and methods The evaluation of Offloading using a new removable ORTHOsis in DIABetic foot study is a French multicenter (13 centers) randomized controlled trial with blinded end points evaluation. Adults with neuropathic DFU were randomly assigned to either Orthèse Diabète (experimental device), or any type of conventional (usually used in France) removable offloading devices (control group). The primary outcome was the 3-month proportion of patients with fully healed DFU.Results Among 112 randomized patients (men 78%, age 62±10 years), the primary outcome occurred in 19 (33%) participants using conventional device vs 19 (35%) Orthèse Diabète users (p=0.79). Study groups were also comparable in terms of prespecified secondary end points including occurrence of new DFU (25% vs 27% in conventional and experimental groups), ipsilateral lower-limb amputation (4% vs 10%) or infectious complications (14% vs 13%) (p>0.05 for all). Adverse events were comparable between groups, including 4 deaths unrelated to study allocation (1 sudden death, 2 ventricular arrhythmias and 1 pancreatic cancer). Adverse events believed to be related to the device were higher in the Orthèse Diabète group than in the control group (15% vs 4%). Orthèse Diabète was less frequently worn than conventional devices (46% vs 66%, p=0.04).Conclusions Orthèse Diabète, a new removable offloading orthosis immobilizing foot and ankle joints did not show superiority compared with conventional removable devices in neuropathic DFU healing and cannot be recommended to heal DFU.Trial registration number NCT01956162.