Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study was designed to determine the heal rate of diabetic foot ulcers at 4 weeks, and complete closure at 8 and 12 weeks of patients treated with either NuShield or Affinity compared to standard care alone.
Full description
This is a three (3)-arm evaluation in 100 patients over 3 facilities with diabetic foot ulcers (DFU). Patients will be treated with NuShield or Affinity together with standard therapy or with standard care alone. For the purposes of this evaluation, standard therapy will consist of extensive debridement of nonviable tissue, saline-moistened non-occlusive dressing, off-loading to decrease pressure on extremity, aggressive treatment of infection and arterial revascularization if indicated. The patients will receive NuShield or Affinity plus standard therapy to determine optimal application method. The evaluation duration is 4 weeks with 8-week and 12-week follow-up visits. Patients with diabetic neuropathic foot ulcers of at least 4 weeks duration and free of clinical signs of infection at the time of treatment may be eligible for inclusion. At Week -1, each patient will undergo aggressive, surgical debridement. The site should be free of fibrin, necrotic and callous tissue. Digital imaging and planimetery of the target ulcer will be performed pre- and post initial debridement and at each subsequent visit as per the evaluation schedule. This evaluation is designed to investigate the potential of an allogeneic placental-derived amniotic membrane to accelerate healing of lower extremity DFU when used in conjunction with standard therapy. This potential will be measured as an increase in the rate of healing (daily decrease in percent wound area/volume compared to initial debrided ulcer area/volume) of patients treated with NuShield or Affinity plus standard wound care compared to patients treated with standard good wound care alone. Studies by Margolis and co-workers have demonstrated that the use of this surrogate marker, measured at 4 and 8 weeks of care, is predictive (>70%) of wound healing in patients with DFU at the 20th week of care. [Kantor 1998; Margolis 2003] The secondary endpoint will be patients achieving complete closure (100%) by week 12.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Patients with evidence of skin cancer within or adjacent to the ulcer site.
Patients who have signs and symptoms of boney pathology (i.e. osteomyelitis) following debridement.
Patients with ulcers on the calcaneus.
Patients who have significant arterial disease as determined by ABI, duplex Doppler sonography (PVR) or magnetic resonance angiography (MRA): Ankle-Brachial Index < 0.8 (note: this is an ABI-equivalent, based on biphasic or triphasic color duplex - PVR or MRA. Diabetics often have peripheral vascular calcification or poorly compressible vessels resulting in abnormally high ABIs); dorsum transcutaneous oxygen test (TcPO2) < 30 mmHg; absence of tibial or plantar pulses.
Patients who have documented clinically significant medical conditions, which would impair wound healing. This includes:
Patients with active systemic cancer receiving active cancer therapy
Patients who are currently receiving, or have received within 1 week prior to study entry:
Patients enrolled in wound or drug investigational agent study for any disease within the past 4 weeks.
Patients previously treated with amniotic membrane, PRP/PRFM, stem cell therapy, Apligraf, OrCel, Dermagraft, Graft Jacket, Oasis, stem cell therapy or any other advanced therapy at the target site for 1 month prior to enrollment.
Pregnant or breast-feeding.
Patients, who in the opinion of the investigator, for any reason other than those listed above, will not be able to complete the study per protocol.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
96 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal