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The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of cold atmospheric plasma treatment in promoting the healing of chronic wounds in adult participants suffering from chronic wounds. The main questions is the following: Does the application of cold atmospheric plasma accelerate wound healing compared to standard wound care alone?
Researchers will compare standard of care plus plasma treatment with standard of care alone to see if the plasma-treated group shows faster wound healing.
Participants will:
Full description
This is a multicenter, randomized, controlled clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) therapy using the Plasana One® device in the treatment of chronic wounds. The study aims to compare the outcomes of standard of care alone versus standard of care combined with plasma treatment.
60 eligible participants presenting with chronic wounds (such as venous leg ulcers or diabetic foot ulcers) will be randomized into two groups:
One group will receive standard wound care as per clinical practice.
The other group will receive standard wound care along with cold plasma therapy administered using the Plasana One® device.
6 participants suffering from pressure ulcers will also be included for an ancillary study.
The study includes both hospital-based and home-based components. Key study procedures include wound assessment through photography, clinical data collection using an electronic case report form (eCRF), and evaluation of patient-reported outcomes such as quality of life (Wound-QoL questionnaire).
Treatments and follow-up visits will be conducted by hospital investigators and home healthcare professionals, depending on the participant's care pathway. Plasma treatment will be delivered by trained nurses during home visits, with gas supplies and device management coordinated by a home care service provider (PSAD).
The primary objective is to evaluate the efficacy of the cold plasma device Plasana One® in the local management of chronic wounds in participants suffering from diabetic foot ulcers and venous leg ulcers, at Week 6.
Secondary objectives include wound healing progression, quality of life, safety of plasma application, and user satisfaction over a 20-week period.
The objective of the ancillary study will be to describe the healing process in pressure ulcers.
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Inclusion criteria
Adult patient, age ≥ 18 years,
Patients affiliated with a social security system or benefiting from such a system,
Patients able and willing to provide written informed consent,
Patients able and willing to attend regular follow-up visits during up to 20 weeks, and comply with study procedures,
Patients whose home healthcare professional is willing to follow the clinical investigation protocol,
Patient with gas conformed stockage area (ventilated or at least 7m²)
Patients without infection, or with a local controlled infection,
Patients with VLU:
Patients with DFU:
Patient with PU:
Exclusion criteria
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Allocation
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66 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Gwénaëlle Droguet; Yves Matton
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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