Society for Vascular Surgery limb stage and patient risk correlate with outcomes in an amputation prevention program

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Abstract

Objective Clinical decision making and accurate outcomes comparisons in advanced limb ischemia require improved staging systems. The Society for Vascular Surgery Lower Extremity Threatened Limb Classification System (Wound extent, Ischemia, and foot Infection [WIfI]) was designed to stratify limb outcomes based on three major factors-wound extent, ischemia, and foot infection. The Project or Ex-Vivo vein graft Engineering via Transfection III (PREVENT) III (PIII) risk score was developed to stratify patients by expected amputation-free survival (AFS) after surgical revascularization. This study was designed to prospectively assess limb and patient-based staging for predicting outcomes of hospitalized patients in an amputation prevention program. Methods This study undertook a retrospective analysis of prospectively gathered registry data of consecutive patients with limb-threatening conditions admitted to a fully integrated vascular/podiatry service over a 16-month period. Upon admission, limb risk was stratified using the WIfI system and patient risk was categorized using PIII classification. Patients were assessed for perioperative and postdischarge outcomes, and their relationship to staging at admission was analyzed. Results There were 174 threatened limbs (143 hospitalized patients) stratified by WIfI stage (1%-12%, 2%-28%, 3%-24%, 4%-28%, 5%-3%, unstaged-5%) and PIII risk (34% low, 49% moderate, and 17% high risk). Diabetes and end-stage renal disease were associated with WIfI stage (P =.006 and P =.018) and PIII risk (P =.003 and P

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Causey, M. W., Ahmed, A., Wu, B., Gasper, W. J., Reyzelman, A., Vartanian, S. M., … Conte, M. S. (2016). Society for Vascular Surgery limb stage and patient risk correlate with outcomes in an amputation prevention program. In Journal of Vascular Surgery (Vol. 63, pp. 1563e2-1573.e2). Mosby Inc. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvs.2016.01.011

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