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Objectives:
Diabetes has a prevalence of 11.6% in China with diabetic foot ulcerations affecting over 30 million Chinese. 85% of these patients require amputation and 5-year mortality for diabetics is 70% when associated foot ulcers.
Clinical trials have shown that standing on whole-body vibration platforms, specifically low-magnitude high-frequency vibration (LMHFV); promotes angiogenesis, enhances muscle bulk and accelerates epithelization. Investigation on diabetic rats with foot wounds found accelerated wound healing, increased perfusion and upregulation of factors such as VEGF, PECAM-1 and PCNA.
Hypothesis:
The investigators postulate LMHFV will enhance diabetic foot ulcer healing.
Design and Subjects:
Prospective, single-centre, randomised control trial to treat 106 subjects with diabetic foot ulcers.
Interventions:
The intervention group will stand on LMHFV whole-body vibration platforms for 20min on alternate days for 20 weeks, together with conventional dressing by a trained wound-care nurse as in the control group.
Main Outcome Measures:
Ulcer size will be measured at multiple time points, the incidence of amputations/infections will be recorded, perfusion via ankle-brachial pressure index will be calculated and foot function via the foot and ankle outcome score will be analysed.
Data analysis:
Repeated measure of ANOVA to analyze time-point differences and student's t-test for same time-point comparison.
Expected Results:
This is the first clinical trial to investigate the effect of whole-body vibration on diabetic foot ulcers. It will show the investigators if the results from animal studies will translate into clinically significant results. If positive effects are established, whole-body vibration can be a valuable treatment regime to tackle diabetic foot ulcers.
Full description
Plan of Investigation: (fig 04 in supplementary notes, CONSORT diagram)
Subjects:
Participants will be recruited from the patients in the Orthopaedic & Traumatology department at the Prince of Wales Hospital, the tertiary teaching hospital affiliated to CUHK.
Sample size: 106 subjects randomized 1:1 into the two treatment groups accounting for a dropout rate of 15%.
The sample size was calculated by using the primary endpoint of wound size in G*Power 3.1.9.4 (Germany). Using a 1:1 randomization ratio a type I error rate (a-level) of 0.05 and power of 0.95. Our vibration study of diabetic rat wounds showed an effect size d of 0.99. We estimate a tuned-down effect in human subjects, thus using an effect size of 0.7 we calculated that we should recruit 90 participants with 45 in each group. (22)
Methods:
Study Design:
Randomized Controlled Trial 1:1 randomization into control n=58 or intervention (Vibration) group n=58. Intervention
Data Analysis:
Randomisation performed using computer-generated randomization with a 1:1 allocation ratio using permuted block randomization to ensure similar numbers in the control and vibration group.
Compliance to intervention:
Conventional dressing: Each attendance to wound dressing will be recorded by the clinic nurse; those with <60% attendance to the wound clinic will be excluded.
LMHFV Vibration: each participant in the vibration intervention group will be assigned a personal 'smart card'. This smart card will record each utilization of the vibration platform to ensure compliance, those with <66% attendance will be excluded.
Repeated measures of ANOVA will be used to analyze the ulcer size groups and time points differences with be analyzed with post-hoc Bonferroni tests. Student's t-test for two independent samples will be used to compare groups of the same time point. Statistical analyses will be performed using IBM SPSS 25 (IBM, Armonk, NY, USA), and statistical significance was considered at p < 0.05.
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106 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Gloria Chan; Samuel KK Ling, MBChB
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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