BMC Infectious Diseases (Aug 2018)

A randomized, controlled study to investigate the efficacy and safety of a topical gentamicin-collagen sponge in combination with systemic antibiotic therapy in diabetic patients with a moderate or severe foot ulcer infection

  • Ilker Uçkay,
  • Benjamin Kressmann,
  • Sarah Malacarne,
  • Anna Toumanova,
  • Jaafar Jaafar,
  • Daniel Lew,
  • Benjamin A. Lipsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-018-3253-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background An adjunctive topical therapy with gentamicin-sponges to systemic antibiotic therapy might improve the healing of infected diabetic foot ulcers (DFUI). Methods Single-center, investigator-blinded pilot study, randomizing (1:1) the gentamicin-sponge with systemic antibiotic versus systemic antibiotics alone for patients with DFUI. Results We included 88 DFUI episodes with 43 patients in the gentamicin-sponge arm and 45 in the control arm. Overall, 64 (64/88; 73%) witnessed total clinical cure, 13 (15%) significant improvement, and 46 (52%) showed total eradication of all pathogens at the final visit. Regarding final clinical cure, there was no difference in favour of the gentamicin-sponges (26/45 vs. 31/43; p = 0.16). However, the gentamicin-sponge arm tended to a more rapid healing. In multivariate analysis adjusting for the case-mix, the variable “gentamicin-sponge” was not significantly associated with “cure and improvement”. Gentamicin-sponges were very well tolerated, without any attributed adverse events. Conclusions The gentamicin-sponge was very well tolerated, but did not significantly influence overall cure. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01951768). Date 2 April 2013.

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