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Negative Pressure Wound Therapy for the Treatment of Chronic Pressure Wounds

A 12-week, Prospective, Open-label, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial Comparing Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) to Standard Wound Care for the Treatment of Chronic Pressure Wounds of the Pelvic Region

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00691821
Acronym
NPWT
Enrollment
184
Registered
2008-06-05
Start date
2009-04-30
Completion date
2010-05-31
Last updated
2011-07-26

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Skin Ulcer, Pressure Ulcer

Keywords

Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy, Bandages, Community Health Services

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to assess the difference in the percent reduction in wound surface area, without surgery, of chronic pressure ulcers of the pelvic region for Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) compared to the standard dressing. This study is designed to provide evidence regarding NPWT as compared to standard dressing regimens and compare the efficacy, safety, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness.

Detailed description

The Ontario Health Technology Advisory Committee recommended that a study should be completed due to the large numbers of patients needing chronic wound care and the increasing use of NPWT based on poor quality evidence to identify any potential indications for the use of NPWT. This study is designed to provide evidence regarding NPWT as compared to standard dressing regimens in Ontario and the results will serve as a benchmark for the utilization of NPWT in chronic pressure wounds, establishing and providing guidance regarding the use of NPWT in this population of subjects and to support policy decision making regarding the funding of the NPWT in the province. Specifically, this will compare the efficacy, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of NPWT with standard dressing regimens for the treatment of chronic pressure ulcers of the pelvic region. This is a prospective, randomized, open-label, controlled clinical trial comparing standardized wound dressing (control arm) to NPWT (experimental arm) for the treatment of chronic pressure wounds of the pelvic region. NPWT will be performed using the Vacuum-Assisted Closure System (V.A.C.® Therapy™, KCI Medical Canada Inc., Mississauga, Ontario). NPWT will be compared to the present recommended state of the art wound dressings in subjects who would be candidates for either type of wound therapy. Both arms will receive standard wound care (e.g., debridement, preventative care, infection control, etc.). The efficacy, effectiveness, safety, and quality of life will be evaluated for standardized wound dressing versus NPWT. Complications associated with either form of wound care will be documented. An economic evaluation will be conducted in order to assess the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of NPWT compared to standard wound dressing. It is anticipated that 184 subjects will be enrolled and randomized over a 1.5 year period. All subjects providing consent and meeting inclusion/exclusion criteria will be randomized to either treatment arm and followed for 12 weeks. Patients who have wound closure within the 12-week study period will continue to have wound care visits as scheduled. All subjects will have Wound Evaluation Visits and Wound Dressing Change Visits. Wound Evaluation Visits will occur at baseline, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 12 weeks after the date of randomization, where following removal of the dressing, a detailed wound assessment (e.g., wound characteristics, measurements) will be done and healthcare resource utilization will be collected. Disease specific quality of life measures and preference based quality of life measures (EQ-5D) will be collected at baseline, 6 weeks and at 12 weeks. Dressing Change Visits will occur as clinically required and the frequency of dressing changes per week will be allowed to vary over the 12 weeks of the study. During the dressing change visits, subjects will be monitored for wound infection and other complications. Subjects may be enrolled and randomized in the clinic and transferred to the community with continued follow-up completed by the appropriate Community Care Access Centre.

Interventions

Participants will receive standard dressings changes as needed. Different dressing types (e.g., silver, simple gauze, hydrogel, foam, creams, gels) will be used dependent on the type of the wound (e.g., dry, wet, and intermediate).

DEVICENegative Pressure Wound Therapy (Vacuum-Assisted Closure System [V.A.C.® Therapy™, KCI Medical Canada Inc., Mississauga, Ontario])

Participants will receive negative pressure wound therapy.

Sponsors

Ontario Ministry of Health and Long Term Care
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Unity Health Toronto
CollaboratorOTHER
Women's College Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
Hamilton Niagara Haldimand Brant Community Care Access Centre
CollaboratorOTHER
Toronto Central Community Care Access Centre
CollaboratorOTHER
St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Age \> 18 years 2. All chronic pressure wounds of the pelvic region except trochanteric wounds. 3. Chronic pressure wound defined as the presence of a pressure wound for \> 6 weeks and \< 6 months with no sign of improvement in healing 4. Wound size surface area \> 2cm2 5. Stage III-IV pressure ulcer according to the National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP) 6. No clinical signs of active infection at the wound site and currently not on antibiotics 7. Willingness to off-load or pressure redistribute ulcer

Exclusion criteria

1. Candidate for surgery in the next 12 weeks 2. A wound with necrotic tissue unable to tolerate debridement 3. Exposed blood vessels and/or organs within the wound 4. Chronic osteomyelitis (as determined by biopsy) or osteomyelitis that is not treatable by debridement and antibiotics 5. Non-enteric or unexplored fistulae 6. Wounds requiring hemostasis (i.e., that the flow of blood be stopped) for local bleeding 7. Alternate etiology for non-healing 8. Concomitant conditions that in the judgment of the investigator would make the subject inappropriate for entry to the study (e.g., malignancy in wound, malignancy less than 1-year disease free interval, previous or current irradiation, known immunodeficiency and/or major uncorrected medical disorders such as serious non-malignant disease, serious cardiovascular or pulmonary disease, lupus, inflammatory bowel disease, palliative care or sickle cell disease) 9. Poor nutritional status as determined by a Braden Scale Nutritional Assessment score of 2 or 1 with a serum albumin \< 25 g/L and hemoglobin \< 90 g/L 10. Currently taking medication that may interfere with wound healing (e.g., oral systemic steroids, immunosuppressive drugs, unfractionated heparin infusion) 11. Women who are currently pregnant or are breast feeding; or women of child bearing potential who are not currently taking adequate birth control 12. Participation in another investigative drug or device trial currently or within the last 30 days

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
The primary outcome is the percent reduction in wound surface area, without surgery, at 12 weeks compared to wound measurements at treatment initiation following randomization.12 Weeks

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Wound healing, effectiveness, safety, healthcare resource utilization, costing, quality of life, cost effectiveness analysis12 Weeks

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 25, 2026