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The Role of Amnion Membrane Allografts in Nipple Preservation

The Role of Amnion Membrane Allografts in Nipple Preservation After Nipple Sparing Mastectomy: A Double-Blinded Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06073808
Acronym
AmnioFix
Enrollment
30
Registered
2023-10-10
Start date
2026-01-01
Completion date
2026-09-30
Last updated
2025-11-17

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

Conditions

Mastectomy, Gender Affirmation Surgery, Nipple Sparing Mastectomy, Prophylactic Mastectomy, Benign Breast Condition

Keywords

nipple sparing mastectomy, gender affirming surgery

Brief summary

The overall objective of this proposal is to conduct a randomized-controlled study to determine whether treatment with dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane (dHACMs) allografts can improve NAC viability in patients undergoing nipple sparing mastectomy (NSM). dHACM allografts are commercially available tissue membranes with biocompatible extracellular matrix and growth factors that have been shown to improve wound healing in patients with chronic and lower extremity wounds. To date, no study has evaluated the impact of dHACMs on NAC preservation following NSM. Investigators hypothesize that subareolar surgical implantation of dHACM allografts at time of NSM will reduce NAC necrosis and improve viability.

Detailed description

This proposal will be the first clinical trial to evaluate the clinical efficacy of dHACM allografts in NSM. The topic of study not only addresses a critically unmet need in the field of plastic surgery, but also maintains exceptional scientific and clinical merit. This study would be the first to establish dHACM allografts as a novel, innovative, and biologically-based adjunctive mechanism to improve vascularity and wound healing following NSM. Such findings would not only provide the evidence-base for widespread implementation of dHACM allografts in the surgical management of breast patients, but also serve as a catalyst to study the clinical efficacy of these allografts in other plastic surgical patient cohorts. Overall, this proposal aims to serve as a successful translational model incorporating scalable, biologically-based regenerative therapies in a surgical population. Nipple necrosis is a major complication after nipple sparing mastectomy, a procedure that is commonly performed in the human population for gender reassignment surgery and for breast cancer prevention. This study will assess the efficacy of dHACMs can improve nipple viability after NSM.

Interventions

DEVICEAmnioFix dehydrated Human Amnion/Chorion Membrane Allograft

Dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane (dHACMs) allografts have recently been identified as an easy-to-use treatment alternative for management of chronic wounds. These commercially available allografts contain concentrated cytokines and growth factors known to promote wound healing. Preclinical studies suggest that dHACM allografts provide a complex, biologically-driven mechanism to promote soft tissue repair and regeneration, including stimulation of mesenchymal stem cell migration and dermal fibroblast proliferation, establishment of a supportive inflammatory environment, and restoration of extracellular matrix integrity with positive tissue architecture remodeling. Clinically, dHACM allografts have been shown to improve healing time and wound closure rates in chronic wound patients. However, no study to date has evaluated the impact of dHACM allografts on nipple necrosis following NSM.

Control device will be applied to non-experimental breast. Each patient will serve as their own control.

Sponsors

Stanford University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

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

Intervention model description

Each patient will serve as their own control: one breast will receive the control device, and the other will receive the study device.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
15 Years to 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Biologically female with documented diagnosis of gender dysphoria, desire to undergo gender affirming surgery (female-to-male) NSM, and age 15 years of age or older. * Biological female, age 18 to 75 years old, who desire to undergo bilateral prophylactic NSM for nonmalignant breast conditions or to reduce the risk of breast cancer.

Exclusion criteria

* Current steroid use * Known connective tissue disorder * Known neuropathy * Known history of breast cancer * History of breast radiotherapy * Pregnant or nursing

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Rate of Nipple Necrosis in patients who receive dHACM during nipple sparing mastectomy (NSM)through study completion, an average of 3 months post opThe primary endpoint of this study is number of nipples with necrosis as defined by dark blue or black nipple discoloration, ultimately resulting in scabs or open wounds up to 3 months post-operatively.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Rate of Nipple Healingthrough study completion, an average of 3 months post opNumber of nipples that have healed per clinician assessment.
Degree of nipple lossthrough study completion, an average of 3 months post opNumber of nipples partially or wholly lost to necrosis.
Nipple perfusionthrough study completion, an average of 3 months post opPerfusion of blood in the nipple assessed via indocyanine green (ICG)-SPY technology.
Aesthetic satisfaction scale score; scale used is a likert scale (very satisfied, satisfied, neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, dissatisfied, very dissatisfiedthrough study completion, an average of 3 months post opParticipant-rated satisfaction.
Number of Participants with Nipple Sensationthrough study completion, an average of 3 months post opParticipants indicated whether they have nipple sensation (innervation) (Y/N).

Countries

United States

Contacts

Primary ContactKassandra Carrion
kcarrion@stanford.edu650-498-6004
Backup ContactDung Nguyen, MD, PharmD
nguyendh@stanford.edu

Outcome results

None listed

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