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Early Venous Reflux Ablation Ulcer Trial (EVRA)

Imperial College London logo

Imperial College London

Status

Completed

Conditions

Venous Leg Ulcer

Treatments

Procedure: Early endovenous ablation
Procedure: Delayed endovenous intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03286140
13HH0722

Details and patient eligibility

About

The EVRA study evaluates the effects of early endovenous ablation on ulcer healing in patients with chronic venous ulceration. Half the patients are randomised to receive early endovenous ablation (within 2 weeks) and half to standard care

Full description

A large number of patients (around 1% of the adult population) suffer from an ulcer (break in the skin surface) near the ankle. In most people, such an injury should heal up within a week or two. However, when there is an underlying problem with the skin, ulcers do not heal and may result in longstanding (chronic), painful, smelly and embarrassing wounds. The ulcers are often due to varicose veins in the legs, which can cause skin breakdown and ulcer formation. To get the ulcer to heal, the current best treatment is to wear a tight compression bandage with multiple layers, with which about 60% of these ulcers will heal within 24 weeks. There is evidence that treatment of the varicose veins by surgery will prevent the ulcer from returning after it has healed. Recent studies have suggested that newer techniques of treating varicose veins, such as injecting a medicine into the varicose vein (sclerotherapy) or treating the vein with heat ablation to seal it (using laser or radiofrequency), in an outpatient setting may help the ulcers to heal more quickly and (like surgery) reduce the chance of the ulcer coming back. These techniques can be carried out in the outpatient setting and are much better tolerated by patients in comparison to surgery. The aim of this study is to see whether early treatment of varicose veins using sclerotherapy or heat ablation helps with healing.

Enrollment

450 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Current leg ulceration of greater than 6 weeks, but less than 6 months duration
  • Able to give informed consent to participate in the study after reading the patient information documentation
  • Patient age > 18 years
  • Ankle Brachial Pressure Index (ABPI) ≥ 0.8
  • Superficial venous disease on colour duplex assessment deemed to be significant enough to warrant ablation by the treating clinician (either primary or recurrent venous reflux)

Exclusion criteria

  • Presence of deep venous occlusive disease or other conditions precluding superficial venous intervention (at the discretion of local research team)
  • Patients who are unable to tolerate any multilayer compression bandaging / stockings will be excluded. However, concordance with compression therapy can be variable for patients at different times. Patients who are generally compliant with compression, but unable to tolerate the bandages for short periods will still be eligible to inclusion. A period of non-compliance with compression bandages will not be considered a protocol violation, but a normal variation within the spectrum of 'standard therapy'.
  • Inability of the patient to receive prompt endovenous intervention by recruiting centre
  • Pregnancy (female participants of reproductive age will be eligible for inclusion in the study, subject to a negative pregnancy test prior to randomisation)
  • Leg ulcer of non-venous aetiology (as assessed by responsible clinician)
  • Patient deemed to require skin grafting

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

450 participants in 2 patient groups

Standard therapy arm
Active Comparator group
Description:
Multilayer elastic compression bandaging/ stockings with deferred treatment of superficial reflux (usually once the ulcer has healed)
Treatment:
Procedure: Delayed endovenous intervention
Early arm
Experimental group
Description:
Early endovenous treatment of superficial venous reflux(within 2 weeks) in addition to standard compression therapy
Treatment:
Procedure: Early endovenous ablation

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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