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AI Wound Alert & Home Management for Recurrent DFU

P

Peking University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Diabetic Foot Ulcer (DFU)

Treatments

Behavioral: Individualized follow-up care

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07277010
Long2025-DFU-recurrence cohort

Details and patient eligibility

About

Diabetes is one of the major chronic diseases, and diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) is a significant adverse prognosis of diabetes. The recurrence of DFU after healing involves multiple risk factors, such as changes in foot loading patterns, patient compliance, family care capacity, blood glucose monitoring, the degree of ischemia, and control of systemic diseases. Early identification of signs of DFU recurrence and timely follow-up interventions are crucial for improving prognosis, reducing disability rates, and lowering healthcare costs. However, traditional follow-up systems lack individualized strategies (e.g., insufficient risk stratification, rigid follow-up intervals, inadequate compliance management), often resulting in low follow-up efficacy. High-risk patients prone to recurrence may not receive frequent enough follow-ups for early detection, while low-risk patients unlikely to recur may undergo multiple unnecessary visits, increasing the burden on both patients and healthcare providers. This inefficiency is a key reason for the persistently high rates of disability and mortality among patients with recurrent DFU. Establishing individualized follow-up strategies for DFU, leveraging advanced technologies to address core bottlenecks such as delayed recurrence warnings and insufficient home management, represents an effective technical approach to solving these problems.

Our center aims to establish and refine a specialized cohort for active DFU follow-up, along with a multimodal database with comprehensive indicators. We plan to explore a high-risk foot grading system for preventing DFU recurrence and develop targeted follow-up protocols. Using AI technology, we will create a wound alert system capable of identifying DFU recurrence and explore a remote healthcare and AI-assisted prevention and control system for DFU recurrence, centered on patient self-management at home.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • A diagnosis of type 1 or type 2 diabetes in accordance with the definitions set by the World Health Organization;
  • The wound was caused by diabetic foot*. After treatment, the wound healed. The criteria for successful healing were as follows: the wound was dry with no exudate; the wound bed and edges were completely epithelialized; there were no signs of redness or swelling in the surrounding area; and the wound had sufficient tensile strength to withstand pressure without cracking;
  • Voluntarily participated in this study and signed the informed consent form.

Exclusion criteria

  • The patient is unable to cooperate or has a mental disorder;
  • At the discretion of the researchers, the subject is not suitable for this study or is unable to comply with the requirements of this study.

Trial design

200 participants in 1 patient group

The population with DFU recovery
Description:
The wound was caused by diabetic foot. After treatment, the wound healed. The healing criteria were as follows: the wound was dry with no exudate; the wound bed and edges were completely epithelialized; there were no signs of redness or swelling in the surrounding area; and the wound had sufficient tensile strength to withstand pressure without cracking
Treatment:
Behavioral: Individualized follow-up care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Long Executive Deputy Director, Medical Doctor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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