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Laser Therapy for Onychomycosis in Patients Wih Diabetes at Risk for Diabetic Foot Complications (LASER-1)

M

Medical Research Foundation, The Netherlands

Status

Completed

Conditions

Onychomycosis

Treatments

Device: Sham procedure
Device: Nd:YAG laser pulse therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01996995
NL46084.075.13 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

In a sham controlled double-blind trial we aim to establish the efficacy and safety of local application of laser therapy in patients with diabetes with onychomycosis and risk factors for diabetes related foot complications. Onychomycosis leads to thickened and distorted nails, which in turn leads to increased local pressure. The combination of onychomycosis and neuropathy or peripheral arterial disease (PAD) increases the risk of developing diabetes related foot complications. Usual care for high-risk patients with diabetes and onychomycosis is completely symptomatic with frequent skiving and clipping of the nails. No effective curative local therapies exist and systemic agents are often withheld due to concerns for side effects and interactions.

Aim: The primary aim is to evaluate the efficacy of 4 sessions N-YAG 1064nM laser application on the one-year clinical and microbiological cure rate in a randomised, double-blinded sham-controlled design with blinded outcome assessment.

Study population: Patients with diabetes mellitus, with an increased risk for diabetic foot ulcers.

Intervention: local laser treatment from a podiatrist and the other group receives treatment according to a control procedure. The laser procedure will be performed as a sham procedure by a second podiatrist.

Main study parameters/endpoints: The effect of 4 sessions of laser therapy on cure rate (clinical and microbiological) after one year.

Full description

Setting of the study: Hospital, outpatient departments (Foot clinic, Isala, Zwolle)

Inclusion criteria: Patients with clinical suspicion and microbiologic confirmation of onychomycosis , diagnosis of T1DM or T2DM, 18 years or older, at risk for diabetic foot ulcers defined by a modified Simm's classification score 1 or 2 with either neuropathy or PAD, nail involvement of at least 25% of the target nail.

Exclusion criteria: no microbiologic confirmation, Simms' classification score 3, the presence or history of diabetic foot ulcers, ischemic pain, ankle brachial index < 0.9, patients receiving dialysis, severe renal insufficiently (eGFR below 30 ml/min), a documented toe pressure below 50 mmHg, use of systemic or topical antifungal agents 3 months prior to inclusion, use of immunosuppressive drugs, presence of psoriasis, lichen planus, or other abnormalities that could result in clinically abnormal toenails, a history of epilepsy and insufficient knowledge of the Dutch language. Patients with a dark skin color (Fitzpatrick 4 and 5) are excluded since dark skin color is associated with dark nails, which theoretically leads to increased temperatures during laser application

Enrollment

64 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diabetes
  • Over 18 years old
  • Clinically suspicion with microbiologic confirmation of onychomycosis
  • Patient is at risk for diabetic foot ulcers defines as Simms score 1, 2 .

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients without the microbiological confirmation of fungal nail infection
  • Patients with an active or history of a diabetic foot ulcer
  • Patients who used systemic or topical anti fungal agents during the preceding 3 months
  • Patients with ischemic rest pain
  • Patients with ankle brachial index < 0.9
  • Patients with a documented toe pressure below 50 mmHg
  • Patients receiving dialysis, severe renal insufficiently (eGFR below 30 ml/min)
  • Patients with an insufficient knowledge of the Dutch language to understand requirements of the study
  • Patients with a dark skin color (Fitspatrick 4 and 5)
  • Patients who uses immunosuppressive medication
  • Patient suffering from nail psoriasis , lichen planus, or other abnormalities that could result in clinically abnormal toenails.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

64 participants in 2 patient groups

Nd:YAG laser pulse therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Nd:YAG laser pulse therapy Patients are treated with laser session in week 0, 2, 4, and 12. The settings are; 1064 nm, spot size 3 mm, 20 J /cm2, 5 Hz, power 10 W, pulse duration 132 millisecond. A maximum of two sequential sessions (one session on the horizontal and one the vertical passing) will be applied to eliminate potential safety issues in those patients with a lack protective sensibility.
Treatment:
Device: Nd:YAG laser pulse therapy
Sham
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Sham treatment Patients are treated with a sham session in week 0, 2, 4, and 12. The study settings are similar to the laser except the laser beam. Because the patient is also blinded, they can't see the procedure. The sound and the beeps are audible similar to the laser treatment.
Treatment:
Device: Sham procedure

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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