Current Pedorthics | July-August 2019 | Vol.51, Issue 4 | 页面 38

Optimization of rocker sole footwear Introduction Background Van Netten et al. [1] highlighted that studies investigating “the specific role of therapeutic footwear in preventing a first foot ulcer in at-risk patients with diabetes are lacking and are therefore urgently needed”. Indeed, use of appropriate footwear by people with diabetes without prior ulceration is widely advocated [2–4] and motivated by a need to reduce plantar pressures that are one of the many risk factors for ulceration [5, 6] . In addition to reducing plantar pressure, however, changes in footwear habits prior to first ulceration would allow more time for footwear related behavior change to become permanent prior to a serious foot or limb threatening event. At that stage adherence with footwear advice or prescriptions is known to affect ulcer healing and risk of reulceration, but effective behavior change is often not achieved. This was demonstrated in a recent trial which observed a significant (19%) reduction in re-ulceration at 18-month follow, but only in the subgroup with good adherence and who wore customized footwear as recommended [7] . Changes in footwear choices and use prior to first ulceration might therefore mitigate the risk of a first ulcer by reducing pressure and improve longer term adherence if ulcers do occur. Prior to investigating the potential reduction in the risk of a first ulcer due to pressure relieving footwear as Van Netten advocates [1] , it is important to optimize the design of the footwear. Indeed, following a systematic review, Bus et al. [8] called for more standardized procedures to inform the design of footwear used in ulcer prevention. To optimize an intervention, it is important to have an objective measure of performance. In cases of re-ulceration, reducing plantar pressures to <200 kPa has been 36 Pedorthic Footcare Association | www.pedorthics.org the target for optimizing footwear design [9– 12] . A corresponding pressure target does not yet exist for first ulceration, but 200 kPa forms a logical initial target. Unfortunately, use of this threshold in practice relies on the use of pressure measurement at the point of footwear provision [7] , and this may not always be feasible. This is especially true prior to first ulceration, when many of the footwear choices made, and implicated in subsequent ulceration, occur in a retail rather than a health care setting. A preferable approach would be use prefabricated footwear incorporating a standardized design (i.e. same for all patients) which is known to reduce pressures <200 kPa for the majority of individuals. This will be referred to as group-optimized footwear. However, no such group-optimized design exists at present and current evidence for footwear achieving the <200 kPa threshold relates only to footwear selected/customized using individual plantar pressure data [7, 10, 12] . We refer to this as personalized footwear. Producing personalized footwear for individual patients is expensive and unlikely to be justified prior to a first ulcer unless there are significant risk factors. Therefore, in order to meet the 200 kPa target using footwear to prevent a first ulcer, it is important to understand whether group-optimized footwear that could be mass produced might suffice or whether personalized footwear is required. In terms of the most appropriate footwear outsole designs for pressure relief, most clinical studies have investigated shoes with some form of stiff rocker outsole [7, 10] . This design has been shown to reduce peak plantar pressures at high risk sites [13] . However, a full description of the design features of the rocker outsole, or indeed the rest of the shoe, is often limited [14] . This is important because it limits our understanding of the relationship between design features (independent variable) and changes of pressure (dependent variable), limiting our ability to