Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the device while reducing the amount of drainage from surgical wounds following large flap surgical procedures, in this case abdominoplasty, as compared to the standard of care (closure techniques). It is hypothesized that the use of the Cohera device will facilitate reduction or closure of dead space when applied to planar surfaces created during an abdominoplasty procedure.
Full description
Background:
Fluid accumulation in dissected tissue planes has been a longstanding problem following surgical procedures. The common use of closed suction drains has been associated with infection risk, wound healing complications, additional scarring, and patient discomfort. Additionally, seroma formation after drain removal often requires invasive treatment. Therapies that can reduce fluid accumulation and decrease the need for drains will have a positive impact on surgical practice.
Objectives:
Material and Methods:
A prospective randomized trial comparing standard wound closure technique with drains in 130 subjects (control group n=65) to standard wound closure techniques plus TissuGlu® and no drains (test group n=65) during Abdominoplasty.
For subjects randomized into the Test Group, TissuGlu® will be applied to one surface of the exposed tissue flap using the custom applicator during a standard abdominoplasty procedure followed by normal wound closure (suturing technique) without drain placement. The applicator device will deliver an array of drops spaced equidistant apart. The user may then reposition the device to the next area and repeat the application process. Each device will dispense approximately 5 ml of adhesive. It is expected that one 5 ml device will suffice for the average sized subject (400-500 sq cm tissue flap). The TissuGlu® is applied using the disposable applicator to the tissue surfaces to be adhered just prior to standard closure. The tissue is then approximated, and the wound is closed using standard suturing techniques. TissuGlu® will begin to cure upon exposure to moisture in the tissue. The cure process takes approximately 30-45 minutes.
Subjects that are randomized to the Control Group will undergo normal wound closure (suturing technique) and placement of two size 12 Blake drains.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
150 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal