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Investigation of a Novel Wound Gel to Improve Wound Healing in Chronic Wounds

Investigating the Effect of an Anti-Biofilm Solution to Reduce Bacterial Burden and Accelerate Healing in Chronic Wounds.

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03686904
Enrollment
11
Registered
2018-09-27
Start date
2018-11-19
Completion date
2020-02-14
Last updated
2022-06-02

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

Conditions

Wound Infection

Brief summary

This is a prospective, randomized, double-blinded, single site study examining the impact of a biofilm-based treatment of chronic wounds of the lower extremity. 200 subjects will be enrolled in this study. Benzalkonium solution wound irrigation and Benzalkonium wound gel will be compared to standard of care wound preparation and dressing (NS wound irrigation and hydrocolloid gel) following local debridement. Wounds will be assessed maximum of 12 weeks with a minimum of 4 follow up visits. Patients will be recruited from the general wound clinic population. No enticement will be offered and participation will be completely voluntary. At enrollment and at each follow up visit the wound will be assessed for size (length, width, and depth), signs of infection or irritation, qualitative and quantitative cultures will be taken before and after debridement, patients will be assessed for compliance to the treatment protocol, satisfaction with their treatment, any adverse effects of the treatment, and hospitalizations since last assessment. It is anticipated that enrollment and completion of the study will take 1 year.

Detailed description

The role of biofilm in causing wound infections and preventing healing is unclear. Preliminary data suggests that persistent biofilm following excisional debridement may re-inoculate clean wounds leading to infection. Additionally, this data also suggests that persistent biofilm leads to chronic wound inflammation. Novel wound gels have been developed which claim to disrupt biofilm and kill biofilm producing bacteria. Patients presenting with a chronic wound will be randomized to receive treatment with a novel anti-biofilm solution BlastX™(benzalkonium gel) or standard of care. All patients presenting with a chronic wound (\>4 weeks duration) will be assessed for eligibility in the study. If eligible, subjects will be randomized into Cohort A (debridement, NS irrigation, SOC topical wound treatment), Cohort B (debridement, benzalkonium irrigation, SOC topical wound treatment), Cohort C (debridement, NS irrigation, and benzalkonium topical wound treatment) of Cohort D (debridement, benzalkonium irrigation, and benzalkonium topical wound treatment). Subjects will receive this treatment until the wound is completely healed or they are exited from the study. Infection of chronic wounds is a multifactorial process involving the interplay between host factors, the condition of the wound, and the number and virulence of bacterial species that flourish and critically colonize in the tissue. 1 It is widely recognized that the microorganisms colonizing in these wounds are biofilm producers. 2, 3, 4, 5 Biofilm is a polymeric slime layer made up of polymeric sugars, microbial and/or host DNA, microbial proteins and host molecules that encapsulate microorganisms.5 This limits the reach of the host immune system and antibacterial agents. Biofilm formation has been associated with the emergence of a diverse group of opportunistic pathogens, such as Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which contribute to recurrent infections by modifying environmental parameters.4 Excisional debridement is the standard of care for chronic wound management and has shown to be effective against biofilm. However, studies have shown that biofilm formation recurs within 24hrs of debridement. Common topical wound preparations contain silver, iodine, honey, or chlorhexidine; none of which have shown efficacy against biofilm.1 Recent studies have reported that when targeting and disrupting the wound biofilm matrix, wound healing outcomes are improved and there is a significant decrease in biofilm-related infections. 3, 5 To date, there is no widely accepted topical agent which targets biofilm. Preliminary and invitro studies have shown benzalkonium chloride to be an effective agent to disrupt biofilm and prevent recolonization. An example of a commercially available formulation of benzalkonium chloride is Benzalkonium gel wound gel and Benzalkonium solution wound irrigation. There is insufficient clinical data suggesting whether a biofilm focused approach is superior or inferior to standard of care treatment. In order to determine the clinical efficacy of a biofilm-focused approached against current stand of care treatment, this study outlines a clinical study evaluating the outcomes of patients treated with Benzalkonium gel and Benzalkonium solution compared to standard of care wound gel and irrigation.

Interventions

DRUGBenzalkonium Gel

antibiofilm solution (BlastX) topical wound gel

OTHERstandard of care topical gel

standard of care topical gel (hydrocolloid topical gel)

PROCEDUREDebridement

Removing dead tissue from infected wound (in clinic)

DRUGbenzalkonium irrigation

washing and lavaging in clinic with benzalkonium irrigation

OTHERSaline Irrigation (SOC Irrigation)

Normal Saline Irrigation (SOC Irrigation)

Sponsors

Next Science TM
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Georgetown University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 99 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Male or female, aged 18-99 2. Chronic wound requiring debridement 3. Wound located anywhere on the body 4. Able to comply with clinical trial requirements

Exclusion criteria

1. Patient unable or unwilling to comply with study requirements 2. Disease or treatment causing substantial immunosuppression 3. History of allergic reaction to benzalkonium 4. Transplant recipient

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Colony Forming Units Count Measure (Primary Measure)12 weeksThe primary outcome is the change in CFU counts after treatment with Benzalkonium solution/Benzalkonium gel or SOC.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in index ulcer size measured in cm squared (Secondary endpoints)12 weeksChange in index ulcer size measured in cm squared
Duration of index ulcer measured in weeks (Secondary endpoints)12 weeksDuration of index ulcer measured in weeks

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Measurement of local perfusion using specialized noninvasive imaging (Tertiary endpoints)12 weeksWe will explore the association between the treatment and change in local perfusion using hyperspectral imaging.
Measurement of time to heal subjects wounds12 weeksInteraction of time with treatment and other baseline covariates will be included and tested

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026