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Foot & Ankle

OUTCOME OF TRANSMETATARSAL AMPUTATIONS IN PATIENTS WITH DIABETES MELLITUS: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY FOOT CARE SERVICE APPROACH

The British Orthopaedic Foot & Ankle Society (BOFAS) Annual Congress 2018, Edinburgh, Scotland, 7–9 November 2018.



Abstract

Aim

This retrospective case series reports the reoperation, major amputation, survival rates and mobility status in diabetic patients who underwent a trans-metatarsal amputation (TMA) managed within a multi-disciplinary diabetic foot care service.

Methods and patients

Forty-one consecutive patients (37 men, 4 women) underwent a TMA between January 2008 to December 2017. They were retrospectively reviewed. The mean age at the time of surgery was 63 years (range 39 – 92).

Results

Eighty-eight per cent (36/41) of the patients were followed-up. Four (11%) of the 36 patients required reoperation, including three major amputations (8%). All the patients requiring a reoperation were vasculopaths. The four-year patient survival rate following a TMA was 69% (25/36). Ninety-six per cent (21/22) of the surviving patients not requiring revision to a major amputation were fully mobile in bespoke orthoses, of whom a third required a stick.

Conclusion

This study shows that transmetatarsal amputation in patients with diabetes, managed in a multi-disciplinary diabetic foot care service, is effective for limb salvage.