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. 2020 Mar 25;13(1):56–62. doi: 10.3400/avd.oa.19-00102

Table 2 Duration of wound in overall population and by scheduled treatment strategy.

Duration of wound ≤1 month 1–2 months 2–3 months 3–6 months >6 months
Overall (n=428) 41.8% [36.9%–46.8%] 22.1% [17.9%–26.2%] 20.2% [16.0%–24.5%] 11.7% [8.5%–14.8%] 4.2% [2.2%–6.2%]
Surgical (n=142) 38.0% [28.9%–47.1%] 22.7% [15.4%–30.0%] 20.6% [12.9%–28.2%] 13.4% [7.3%–19.6%] 5.3% [1.3%–9.3%]
Endovascular (n=275) 44.3% [38.3%–50.3%] 21.0% [16.0%–26.0%] 19.9% [14.9%–24.8%] 11.1% [7.2%–14.9%] 3.7% [1.5%–6.0%]
Conservative (n=11) 36.4% [7.9%–64.8%] 27.3% [1.0%–53.6%] 18.2% [0.0%–41.0%] 9.1% [0.0%–26.1%] 9.1% [0.0%–26.1%]

Data are the estimated proportions [95% confidence intervals] obtained using the multiple imputation methods. The original data on the duration of the wound were available in 388 of 428 patients (90.1%): 117 of 142 surgical patients (82.4%), 260 of 275 endovascular patients (94.5%), and 11of 11 conservative patients (100.0%). The duration of the wound were not different among scheduled treatment strategies (P=0.31 between surgical and endovascular, P=0.48 between surgical and conservative, and P=0.38 between endovascular and conservative, by the linear mixed model including log-transformed duration of wound as the dependent variable, treatment strategies as the fixed effects, and the inter-institution variability as the random effects).