Study Results
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Basic Information
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TERMINATED
196 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2011-05-31
2015-02-28
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Osteomyelitis is considered proven if one or more pathogens are cultured from a reliably obtained bone specimen that shows bone death, acute or chronic inflammation and reparative responses on histological examination. However, histological analysis can also produce falsely positive results based on sampling error or if there are other causes of inflammation \[6\]. Furthermore, a recent study done by Meyr et al. has highlighted a discrepancy amongst pathologists that leaves the medical community questioning the validity of some pathological diagnoses.
Microbiological analysis can differ based on specimen processing and is also dependent on sampling technique. Often results can be falsely negative because of sampling error, prior antibiotic therapy, or inability to culture fastidious organisms; likewise, they may be falsely positive because of contamination by wound-colonizing flora \[6\].
Also, cultures of superficial swab samples from diabetic ulcers and sinus tracts may not adequately identify the true bacteriological characteristics of diabetic foot osteomyelitis because of bacterial colonization of the wound surfaces with microorganisms that are typically not considered to be pathogenic (such as enterococci and coagulase-negative staphylococci) \[7\]. Senneville et al. attempted to define the true correlation between cultures of swab samples and cultures of bone biopsy specimens obtained from areas of osteomyelitis in the diabetic foot. It was found that swab cultures are inaccurate and unreliable indicators of the pathogenic organism in chronic diabetic foot osteomyelitis and there was overall poor concordance between the superficial swab culture and bone biopsy culture results for all microorganisms \[8\].
Other methods for diagnosing osteomyelitis include radiographic analysis. On plain film, osteomyelitis is suspected when one or more of the following radiographic signs is observed: periosteal elevation, cortical disruption, medullary involvement, osteolysis, and sequestra (segments of necrotic bone separated from living bone by granulation tissue) \[9\]. Signs of osteomyelitis only show up on plain film 10-20 days after infection, \[10, 11\]. Dinh et al, in their meta-analysis on radiographic modalities, found 54% sensitivity and 68% specificity in detecting osteomyelitis with plain film versus 90% sensitivity and 79% specificity with MRI \[12\].
To the investigators' knowledge, there has been no study that compares all these methods to determine if there is a superior test to determine osteomyelitis.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
RETROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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bony debridement or amputation
In this study, the investigators will perform a retrospective chart analysis of patients that underwent a bony debridement or amputation in the operating room at Georgetown University Hospital during 2009-2010 under Drs. Steinberg and Attinger
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Georgetown University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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John Steinberg, DPM
Associate Professor
Principal Investigators
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John J. Steinberg, DPM
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Georgetown University Hospital
Paul Kim, DPM
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Georgetown University Hospital
Locations
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Georgetown University Hospital
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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2011-316
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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