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A Randomized Controlled Multicenter Clinical Trial, Evaluating the Efficacy of Dual Layer Amniotic Membrane (Artacent®) and Standard of Care versus Standard of Care alone in the healing Chronic Diabetic Foot Ulcers. Multi-center, open label, randomized controlled trial. Study is estimated to require 12 months from first subject enrolled to last subject visit.
Full description
Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) challenge the most experienced wound care specialist. The US Wound Registry reports that only 40% of DFUs heal in 12 weeks1. Woundologists have adopted the phrase, "time is tissue." This adage reminds clinicians that the longer a DFU remains open, the greater the risk of infection, major amputation and death. The diabetic with a foot ulcer has a mortality rate of 47% which exceeds the mortality2 from most common cancers3. Beyond patient suffering, the treatment of DFUs cost the US health care system more than 15 billion dollars annually4.
In recent years, several clinical trials have demonstrated that products derived from human placental membranes promote the healing of DFUs5. Research has confirmed that growth factors present in amniotic membrane induce angiogenesis, stimulate human dermal fibroblast proliferation, and recruit stem cells important to wound repair and regeneration to the DFU6. All these factors are highly desirable properties in the healing of chronic DFUs.
A novel dual layer amniotic membrane (DLAM, Artacent™, Tides Medical. Lafayette, LA) potentially can increase the delivery of growth factors due to its double layer of amniotic membrane. A prospective case series demonstrated good healing rates in DFUs: 65% healing at 12 weeks7. The current study is the first randomized clinical trial evaluating the efficacy of DLAM in DFUs.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Subjects must be at least 18 years of age or older,
Subjects must have a diagnosis of type 1 or 2 Diabetes mellitus.
At randomization subjects must have a target ulcer with a minimum surface area of 0.7 cm2 and a maximum surface area of 20.0 cm2 measured post debridement with the Tissue Analytics photographic planimetry App.
The target ulcer must have been present for a minimum of 4 weeks and a maximum of 52 weeks of standard of care prior to the initial screening visit.
The target ulcer must be located on the foot with at least 50% of the ulcer below the malleolus.
The target ulcer must be full thickness without exposed bone.
The affected limb must have adequate perfusion confirmed by vascular assessment. Any of the following methods performed within 3 months of the first screening visit are acceptable:
If the subject has two or more ulcers, they must be separated by at least 2 cm. The largest ulcer satisfying the inclusion and exclusion criteria will be designated as the target ulcer.
Target ulcers located on the plantar aspect of the foot must be offloaded for at least 30 days prior to randomization.
The subject must consent to using the prescribed off-loading method for the duration of the study.
The subject must agree to attend the weekly study visits required by the protocol.
The subject must be willing and able to participate in the informed consent process.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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Masking
124 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Doug Payne; Thomas E Serena, MD,FACS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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