Clinical practice recommendations for infectious disease management of diabetic foot infection (DFI) – 2023 SPILF - 25/01/24
the individual members of the “Review group”
Highlights |
• | Recommendations on infectious disease management of diabetic foot infection. |
• | Modalities of microbiological diagnosis according to the stage of wound infection. |
• | Antibiotic treatment regimens (first- and second line regimens, dosing, oral switch) |
• | Shortened duration of antibiotic therapy in well-defined situations. |
Abstract |
In march 2020, the International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) published an update of the 2015 guidelines on the diagnosis and management of diabetic foot infection (DFI). While we (the French ID society, SPILF) endorsed some of these recommendations, we wanted to update our own 2006 guidelines and specifically provide informative elements on modalities of microbiological diagnosis and antibiotic treatment (especially first- and second-line regiments, oral switch and duration).
The recommendations put forward in the present guidelines are addressed to healthcare professionals managing patients with DFI and more specifically focused on infectious disease management of this type of infection, which clearly needs a multidisciplinary approach.
Staging of the severity of the infection is mandatory using the classification drawn up by the IWGDF. Microbiological samples should be taken only in the event of clinical signs suggesting infection in accordance with a strict preliminarily established protocol.
Empirical antibiotic therapy should be chosen according to the IWGDF grade of infection and duration of the wound, but must always cover methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus. Early reevaluation of the patient is a fundamental step, and duration of antibiotic therapy can be shortened in many situations.
When osteomyelitis is suspected, standard foot radiograph is the first-line imagery examination and a bone biopsy should be performed for microbiological documentation. Histological analysis of the bone sample is no longer recommended. High dosages of antibiotics are recommended in cases of confirmed osteomyelitis.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Diabetic foot infections, Skin and soft tissue infection, Osteomyelitis, Antimicrobial treatment
Plan
Vol 54 - N° 1
Article 104832- février 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.