Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Randomized multisite two arms study in which one arm of patients will be treated with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) known also as Vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) treatment ("VAC Arm") and the second arm of patients will be treated with MedCu wound dressings with copper oxide (COD) ("Copper Arm"). The study goals are to compare the efficacy, cost and convenience between MedCu Wound Dressings with Copper Oxide (COD) and Negative Pressure Wound Therapy of diabetic foot wounds.
Full description
Randomized multisite two arms study: one arm will be treated with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) known also as Vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) treatment ("VAC Arm"). The second arm with MedCu wound dressings with copper oxide (COD) ("Copper Arm").
Prior to the commencement of the study the patients will be treated according to the caregiver routine and the wound and patient condition, e.g. surgical or bedside debridement, minor foot amputation and/or various wound dressings. Patients whose foot condition has improved and there is indication for VAC treatment will be randomized to either treatment arm after signing informed consent.
The patients will be then treated for 2-8 weeks with the study treatment.
Treatment termination - Treatment will be stopped due to the following reasons:
Treatment failure
Inability to continue the current treatment for any other reason unrelated to the treatment modality
Expected termination (two to eight weeks) - no indication to continue treatment arm or if sufficient granulation has been achieved and the patient is candidate for skin grafting
Wound closure The VAC treatment will be performed twice weekly, according to the routine practice (usually 75-150 mm Hg). The COD will be changed once a week or more often in highly exudating wounds. The patients will be monitored at least every two weeks in the clinic, but documentation of the wound condition will be obtained in every dressing change or VAC replacement.
Follow-up Period - Patients will be monitored for two additional weekly or biweekly visits (total of 2-4 weeks). The Follow-up Period will be following treatment termination (including wound closure).
In the follow-up period the patient will be treated according to the physician decision based on standard of care, available treatment and wound condition. Continue treatment with the same arm modality, for which the patient had been randomized is allowed and will be recorded. Change into the other arm treatment will be allowed but will be documented as a "Cross Over" and the reason for the cross over will be stated.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Male or female subjects, 18 to 85 years of age at the time of enrollment.
Subject has Diabetes Mellitus (type 1 or type 2) by WHO criteria.
Wounds in which a decision to treat it with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) has been made due to the wound condition and the physician practice (the wound should be one that deem suitable to NPWT treatment).
In the case of wounds involving the plantar aspects, they should be without significant bony prominences (unless off-loading can effectively relieve these pressure areas).
The wound does not have overt signs of infection or if there is residual infection, it is under control and in the process of resolving as evidenced by laboratory tests (within one day prior to study commencement for in-house patients) and clinical judgment.
The wound type configuration and location clearly allows the application of VAC with efficient sealing.
If there are additional wounds in the same foot that can be connected by the same VAC apparatus, then each wound will be considered as an index wound and analyzed separately. If there are additional wounds that cannot be connected by the VAC apparatus, the criteria to include the patient in the study is that these wounds can be dressed separately and not interfere with the VAC apparatus. These wounds will be treated by SOC and will not be included in the statistical analysis.
Vascular assessment:
Having a body mass index (BMI) <45 Kg/m2.
Recent glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) <12.0%.
Recent creatinine level ≤3.0 mg/dL.
No further surgery to handle the wound or the infection is expected or contemplated.
The patient is able and eligible to sign written informed consent and participate in the study.
Be available for the entire study period, and ability and willingness to adhere to the requirements of the study.
Exclusion criteria
General conditions:
Laboratory tests:
Wound condition:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
46 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Eyal Melamed, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal