4.6 Article

Point-of-care fluorescence imaging reveals extent of bacterial load in diabetic foot ulcers

Journal

INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 554-566

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/iwj.14080

Keywords

bacterial load; diabetic foot; fluorescence imaging; infection; wound healing

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Elevated bacterial levels increase the risk of chronic wound infection and hinder healing. This study examined the role of fluorescence imaging in detecting bacteria in wounds. The results show that imaging can improve the detection of bacteria across different loads. A new terminology, chronic inhibitory bacterial load (CIBL), is introduced to describe asymptomatic high bacterial loads in diabetic ulcers, which require clinical intervention.
Elevated levels of bacteria, including biofilm, increase the risk of chronic wound infection and inhibit healing. Addressing asymptomatic high bacterial loads is challenged by a lack of clinical terminology and diagnostic tools. This post-hoc multicenter clinical trial analysis of 138 diabetic foot ulcers investigates fluorescence (FL)-imaging role in detecting biofilm-encased and planktonic bacteria in wounds at high loads. The sensitivity and specificity of clinical assessment and FL-imaging were compared across bacterial loads of concern (10(4)-10(9) CFU/g). Quantitative tissue culture confirmed the total loads. Bacterial presence was confirmed in 131/138 ulcers. Of these, 93.9% had loads >10(4) CFU/g. In those wounds, symptoms of infection were largely absent and did not correlate with, or increase proportionately with, bacterial loads at any threshold. FL-imaging increased sensitivity for the detection of bacteria across loads 10(4)-10(9) (P < .0001), peaking at 92.6% for >10(8) CFU/g. Imaging further showed that 84.2% of ulcers contained high loads in the periwound region. New terminology, chronic inhibitory bacterial load (CIBL), describes frequently asymptomatic, high bacterial loads in diabetic ulcers and periwound tissues, which require clinical intervention to prevent sequelae of infection. We anticipate this will spark a paradigm shift in assessment and management, enabling earlier intervention along the bacterial-infection continuum and supporting improved wound outcomes.

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