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Treatment of Diabetic Foot Ulcers With Inforatio Technique to Promote Wound Healing

Primary Purpose

Diabetic Foot Ulcer, Diabetic Foot, Wound Heal

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Denmark
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Inforatio technique
Sponsored by
Zealand University Hospital
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Diabetic Foot Ulcer focused on measuring Diabetic foot ulcer, Wound treatment, Inforatio technique, Diabetes, Foot ulcer, Outpatient clinic, Feasibility trial, Punch biopsy, Foot ulcer treatment

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

INCLUSION CRITERIA:

We include diabetic patients with foot ulcers that are more than six weeks old and which are located distal to the malleoli.

The diameters of the ulcers must be at least four mms. One wound from each foot of a patient can be included. If a patient's foot have more than one ulcer that meets the abovementioned criteria, the biggest wound is included. If there is no difference in size, the wound that has the most recent onset is included. If two wounds are close to each other and separated by less than 5 mm intact skin, we will consider it as one wound.

Wound onset estimates will be patient-reported.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

We exclude following patients:

  • Patients with dementia and other patients who are not able to give their informed consent.
  • Patients with gangrene, necrosis deeper than 1mm, osteomyelitis and clinical signs of infection in their foot. Infection is identified by clinical assessment based on the classical signs comprising oedema, pain, warmth, redness and purulent exudates and is assessed by an experienced orthopedic surgeon.
  • Patients with ulcers that have positive probe-to-bone test and visible joint and tendons
  • Patients with systolic toe pressure of < 20 mmHg
  • Patients that, since the onset of their present foot ulcer, underwent vascular surgery in the lower extremity with the same laterality as the foot ulcer.
  • Patients that, since the onset of their present foot ulcer, underwent surgical off-loading and amputations
  • Patients that, since the onset of their present foot ulcer, underwent surgical wound revisions in an operating room.
  • Patients that have an acute phase of Charcot arthropathy in the foot that presents with a foot ulcer.
  • Patients that take systemic immunosuppressive drugs.
  • Patients with cancer
  • Patients with scleroderma

Sites / Locations

  • Herlev University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
  • Zealand University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm Type

Experimental

Arm Label

Feasibility trial group

Arm Description

Every trial patient will receive the intervention (the inforatio technique) that is intended for the definitive randomized clinical trial.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Eligibility rates
Descriptive statistics of number and rate of eligible patients during the period of recruitment
Refusal rates
Descriptive statistics of number and rate of eligible patients that refuse trial participation.
Time from identification to inclusion
Descriptive statistics of average time from eligible patients are identified to they are included in the trial (baseline trial visit)
Qualitative assessment of unexpected factors that must cause exclusion
Qualitatively assessed by the primary investigator
Rate of unexpected exclusion
Descriptive statistics of number and rate of patients that are excluded due to reasons not already covered by the trial definition of exclusion criteria.
Retention rates
To investigate protocol adherence, the number and rate of participants that adhere to follow-up will be reported.
Number of missed trial follow-up visits
To investigate protocol adherence, the number of missed trial visits will be reported for each participant.
Drop-out rates
To investigate protocol adherence, the number and rate of participants that choose to drop out during follow-up will be reported.
Rate of eligible patients that accept participation
A quantitative investigation of patient acceptability.
Qualitative assessment of patient acceptability
Assessed by interviews with participants.
Observed harms and unexpected effects
Observed harms and unexpected effects observed by the investigators and staff will be reported.
Patient-reported potential side effects
A qualitatively assessment of harms and unexpected effects by interviewing participants about potential side effects that they experience.
Qualitative assessment of logistics issues regarding outpatient clinic visits
The investigators qualitatively assesses logistic circumstances that may be optimized.The assessment includes whether dates of follow-up visits fit the routines at the outpatient clinics.
Time to healing of punch biopsy scars
The time to healing will be reported to estimate if and when observer blinding may be possible.
Qualitative assessment of the method of wound assessment.
The investigators assess complications related to the method wound bed area and the depth. The aim is to optimize wound assessment for the future definitive trial.
Qualitative assessment of the extent of qualitative patient measures
The investigators assess whether the qualitative patient measures are either too extensive or insufficient. Thus, estimating necessary changes to make the qualitative measurements feasible to include in the future definitive trial.
Qualitative assessment of the feasibility of culturing 3 biopsies from each round of inforatio technique applications for a future definitive trial.
The investigators assess whether the included centers have the capacity to culture three biopsies two times from each patient.
Rates of wound treatments at trial visits that deviate from the trial standard treatment definition
Standard treatments received by each patient at the follow-up visits are recorded and it is assessed whether the standard care received corresponds to the definition of the trial standard treatment.
Qualitative assessment of wound care treatments received between trial visits and the deviations from the trial definition of standard treatment.
The investigators assess the heterogeneity of treatment during follow-up by recording the number of hospital visits between the trial follow-up visits and the treatments and assessments received at these hospital visits.
Time to healing of the foot ulcers
The investigators will report mean and variance of time to healing
Patient-reported experience of trial participation and the inforatio technique
The investigators will interview the patient about their experience of trial participation and of the inforatio technique.
Staff acceptability
Assessed qualitatively by interviews with the staff at the outpatient clinics (wound care nurses and podiatrists)
Qualitative assessment of the inforatio technique
The method of inforatio technique application will be qualitatively assessed by the applicant. The applicant will report any issues or complications regarding the inforatio technique definition.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Full Information

First Posted
March 25, 2019
Last Updated
October 29, 2019
Sponsor
Zealand University Hospital
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03985306
Brief Title
Treatment of Diabetic Foot Ulcers With Inforatio Technique to Promote Wound Healing
Official Title
Treatment of Diabetic Foot Ulcers With Inforatio Technique to Promote Wound Healing: a Feasibility Trial
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
October 2019
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
March 20, 2019 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
September 26, 2019 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
September 26, 2019 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
Zealand University Hospital

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
This trial will examine the feasibility of conducting a definitive randomized clinical trial that tests whether inforatio technique will reduce time to healing of diabetic foot ulcers. Inforatio technique is a procedure where small punch biopsies are taken from the wound bed near the edge of the wound. With this technique, the investigators wish to initiate an acute inflammatory response that increases the generation of granulation tissue with subsequent healing by scar formation. Thus, the investigators hypothesize that inforatio technique will promote healing of diabetic foot ulcers. Based on clinical experience, the investigators have previously detected a reduction in time to healing as an unexpected effect when multiple punch biopsies are taken from the wound bed of diabetic foot ulcers. To the knowledge of the investigators, methods similar to the inforatio technique has not previously been studied.
Detailed Description
BACKGROUND The prevalence of diabetic foot ulcers is expected to increase considerably due to a continuously increasing prevalence of diabetes. The healing process of diabetic foot ulcers is complicated by a complex pathophysiology of the distal lower extremities and a constant exposure to bacteria and pressure. Improving healing of diabetic foot ulcers will have several benefits including higher quality of life, reduced morbidity, reduced mortality and lower socioeconomic costs. Nonetheless, there are few randomized controlled clinical trials on surgical and non-surgical treatment chronic foot ulcers and many studies on the topic have a low level of evidence. TRIAL AIMS The investigators aim to assess the feasibility of conducting a definitive randomized controlled trial by exploring recruitment, patient acceptability, protocol adherence and adverse effects. The success criteria of the trial is as follows: Weekly recruitment rates at two patients or more. Time from first outpatient visit to recruitment at 21 days or less. Retention rate at 90-day follow-up at 50% or more No appearance of unacceptable adverse effects In addition, the trial aims to assess logistic concerns regarding the trial and to improve the method of inforatio application. Based on findings from the feasibility trial, the investigators may amend the design of the definitive trial. RECRUITMENT Patients are eligibility-screened and identified by the primary investigator and wound care staff when patients visit wound outpatient clinics at the recruiting facilities. INCLUSION AND FOLLOW-UP Eligible patients are included if they give their oral and written consent to participate. The baseline trial visit take place on the day that patients give their consent to participate. The trial comprises a 90-day clinical follow-up. Follow-up visits will be at 10, 21, 42 and 90 days after baseline (give or take 3 days). Wounds are assessed at each trial visit. The inforatio technique is applied at baseline and again at the 21-follow-up day if the wound still has a diameter larger than four mms. Participants unable to attend at the precise dates for midtrial follow-up will be eligible for follow-up three days before or after the intended date. The participants who cannot attend during this window will skip the follow-up day in concern. If the participants miss the second intervention at the 21-day follow-up, they are excluded. For the 90-day follow-up, participants are recalled two times by the primary investigator within two weeks before being excluded. Participants exit from the trial if following occurs during follow-up: they undergo surgeries described in the exclusion criteria they get acute signs of infection, gangrene or osteomyelitis in their foot in concern their tendons, joints or bone become exposed in the wound bed they develop an acute phase of charcot arthropathy in their foot in concern they get admitted for reasons related to their foot ulcer they die or emigrate The trial is stopped if the intervention shows an unintended effect or potential harm. TRIAL STANDARD TREATMENT The participants receive a trial standard treatment at every trial visit. The treatment is conducted by the primary investigator in cooperation with wound care nurses and podiatrists. The standard treatment is defined based on Danish National guidelines, local guidelines of the recruiting facilities and guidelines of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. The treatment is based on a flowchart that individualizes treatment based on clinical wound characteristics. INFORATIO TECHNIQUE The technique is described in the Arms and Interventions section. TRIAL MEASURES Wound assessment: Wounds are assessed at every trial visit. To monitor the ulcer area during follow-up, the investigators will analyze digital photos of the ulcer by using Image J which is a wound planimetry software. The depth of the ulcers are measured with sterile wound probes and reported by intervals of 5 millimeters. Undermining will be assessed with the same method as for depth and in intervals of 5 millimeters. Microbial samples: At both stages of inforatio application, three punch biopsies are sent for cultivation to analyze bacterial species, bacterial load and resistance patterns of the bacteria. Patient and staff interviews: described in the Outcome Measures section STATISTICAL ANALYSIS With descriptive statistics participants' demographics, the quantitative success criteria, the quantitative outcome measures and time to healing will be reported. Clinical healing is defined by intact epithelia. The investigators will use statistical software SPSS version 21.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, New York). SAMPLE SIZE CONSIDERATION Because effectiveness is not evaluated, a formal power calculation is not considered necessary for the objectives of a feasibility trial. To minimize the number of patients that are exposed to a new intervention meanwhile keeping a level of precision for the variance estimate, the rule of thumb by Julious et al will be used for determination of the trial sample size. Thus, 12 participants will be included in the trial. Julious et al argues that a sample size of 12 per group gives a sufficient precision of the mean and variance estimates. Other studies report rules of thumbs with larger sample size to gain sufficient power for a pilot or feasibility trial. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS AND RISK ASSESSMENT OF SIDE EFFECTS The procedure of the intervention is small with an expectedly small risk of harm outcomes. The punch biopsies from the inforatio technique is relatively shallow therefore it is not expected that it will penetrate important anatomical structures or expose bone. The primary investigator's clinical assessment, patient preference and patient tolerance is taken into consideration before inforatio technique is applied. Minimal discomfort is expected for the participants when they receive the inforatio technique treatment. Previous applications by the investigators showed that patients reported no or little pain during application. The inforatio technique treatment has previously shown potential to improve healing thus participants may gain an improvement in healing of their foot ulcers. If this trial shows that a definitive randomised clinical trial will be feasible, the investigators will examine the effect of inforatio technique through a larger randomised clinical trial. If the inforatio technique shows significant positive effect on time to healing it would become of great importance for future diabetic foot ulcer patients. The inforatio technique would become an addition to available therapeutic options. The technique is simple and only requires a punch biopsy tool. Nurses and general practitioners can be potential applicants that apply the treatment at clinics close to patient habitats making visits for wound treatment more convenient for the patients. If there is a significant positive effect on healing, it is expected that it will result in reduction of hospital admissions and less surgical interventions including amputations. This project may contribute to more focus on treatment of patients with diabetic foot ulcers - a field of research that still needs studies to enable evidence-based treatment. Inspectors from The National Committee of Health Research Ethics will have the authorization to quality control the trial. COMPETING INTERESTS The trial investigators declare that they have no competing interests.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Diabetic Foot Ulcer, Diabetic Foot, Wound Heal, Ulcer Foot, Ulcer Healing
Keywords
Diabetic foot ulcer, Wound treatment, Inforatio technique, Diabetes, Foot ulcer, Outpatient clinic, Feasibility trial, Punch biopsy, Foot ulcer treatment

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Treatment
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Single Group Assignment
Model Description
The trial is a single-center single-group feasibility trial in outpatient clinical settings. The trial will be reported with reference to the extended CONSORT guidelines.
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
N/A
Enrollment
12 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Feasibility trial group
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Every trial patient will receive the intervention (the inforatio technique) that is intended for the definitive randomized clinical trial.
Intervention Type
Procedure
Intervention Name(s)
Inforatio technique
Intervention Description
We define the inforatio technique as punch biopsies taken in the periphery of the wound bed. The punch biopsies will have a diameter of two mms. The depth of the biopsies is primarily based on clinical assessment on distance to bone by assessment with a sterile wound probe and with attention to location and anatomy. The maximum depth will be 3.5 millimeters. The biopsies will be taken from one to two mms from the wound edges and with a distance of five mms between the biopsies. Inforatio technique is applied after standard care and wound assessment.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Eligibility rates
Description
Descriptive statistics of number and rate of eligible patients during the period of recruitment
Time Frame
The first 2 months of the trial (untill the last patient has been recruited)
Title
Refusal rates
Description
Descriptive statistics of number and rate of eligible patients that refuse trial participation.
Time Frame
The first 2 months of the trial (untill the last patient has been recruited)
Title
Time from identification to inclusion
Description
Descriptive statistics of average time from eligible patients are identified to they are included in the trial (baseline trial visit)
Time Frame
The first 2 months of the trial (untill the last patient has been recruited)
Title
Qualitative assessment of unexpected factors that must cause exclusion
Description
Qualitatively assessed by the primary investigator
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Rate of unexpected exclusion
Description
Descriptive statistics of number and rate of patients that are excluded due to reasons not already covered by the trial definition of exclusion criteria.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Retention rates
Description
To investigate protocol adherence, the number and rate of participants that adhere to follow-up will be reported.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Number of missed trial follow-up visits
Description
To investigate protocol adherence, the number of missed trial visits will be reported for each participant.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Drop-out rates
Description
To investigate protocol adherence, the number and rate of participants that choose to drop out during follow-up will be reported.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Rate of eligible patients that accept participation
Description
A quantitative investigation of patient acceptability.
Time Frame
At baseline, each follow-up visit and when patients drop out.
Title
Qualitative assessment of patient acceptability
Description
Assessed by interviews with participants.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Observed harms and unexpected effects
Description
Observed harms and unexpected effects observed by the investigators and staff will be reported.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Patient-reported potential side effects
Description
A qualitatively assessment of harms and unexpected effects by interviewing participants about potential side effects that they experience.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Qualitative assessment of logistics issues regarding outpatient clinic visits
Description
The investigators qualitatively assesses logistic circumstances that may be optimized.The assessment includes whether dates of follow-up visits fit the routines at the outpatient clinics.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Time to healing of punch biopsy scars
Description
The time to healing will be reported to estimate if and when observer blinding may be possible.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Qualitative assessment of the method of wound assessment.
Description
The investigators assess complications related to the method wound bed area and the depth. The aim is to optimize wound assessment for the future definitive trial.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Qualitative assessment of the extent of qualitative patient measures
Description
The investigators assess whether the qualitative patient measures are either too extensive or insufficient. Thus, estimating necessary changes to make the qualitative measurements feasible to include in the future definitive trial.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Qualitative assessment of the feasibility of culturing 3 biopsies from each round of inforatio technique applications for a future definitive trial.
Description
The investigators assess whether the included centers have the capacity to culture three biopsies two times from each patient.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Rates of wound treatments at trial visits that deviate from the trial standard treatment definition
Description
Standard treatments received by each patient at the follow-up visits are recorded and it is assessed whether the standard care received corresponds to the definition of the trial standard treatment.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Qualitative assessment of wound care treatments received between trial visits and the deviations from the trial definition of standard treatment.
Description
The investigators assess the heterogeneity of treatment during follow-up by recording the number of hospital visits between the trial follow-up visits and the treatments and assessments received at these hospital visits.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Time to healing of the foot ulcers
Description
The investigators will report mean and variance of time to healing
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Patient-reported experience of trial participation and the inforatio technique
Description
The investigators will interview the patient about their experience of trial participation and of the inforatio technique.
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Staff acceptability
Description
Assessed qualitatively by interviews with the staff at the outpatient clinics (wound care nurses and podiatrists)
Time Frame
10 months
Title
Qualitative assessment of the inforatio technique
Description
The method of inforatio technique application will be qualitatively assessed by the applicant. The applicant will report any issues or complications regarding the inforatio technique definition.
Time Frame
5 months. At baseline application and at the 21-day applications.

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA: We include diabetic patients with foot ulcers that are more than six weeks old and which are located distal to the malleoli. The diameters of the ulcers must be at least four mms. One wound from each foot of a patient can be included. If a patient's foot have more than one ulcer that meets the abovementioned criteria, the biggest wound is included. If there is no difference in size, the wound that has the most recent onset is included. If two wounds are close to each other and separated by less than 5 mm intact skin, we will consider it as one wound. Wound onset estimates will be patient-reported. EXCLUSION CRITERIA: We exclude following patients: Patients with dementia and other patients who are not able to give their informed consent. Patients with gangrene, necrosis deeper than 1mm, osteomyelitis and clinical signs of infection in their foot. Infection is identified by clinical assessment based on the classical signs comprising oedema, pain, warmth, redness and purulent exudates and is assessed by an experienced orthopedic surgeon. Patients with ulcers that have positive probe-to-bone test and visible joint and tendons Patients with systolic toe pressure of < 20 mmHg Patients that, since the onset of their present foot ulcer, underwent vascular surgery in the lower extremity with the same laterality as the foot ulcer. Patients that, since the onset of their present foot ulcer, underwent surgical off-loading and amputations Patients that, since the onset of their present foot ulcer, underwent surgical wound revisions in an operating room. Patients that have an acute phase of Charcot arthropathy in the foot that presents with a foot ulcer. Patients that take systemic immunosuppressive drugs. Patients with cancer Patients with scleroderma
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Sahar Moeini, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Zealand University Hospital Koege, Denmark
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Hans Gottlieb, Chief consultant, MD PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Herlev University Hospital, Denmark
Official's Role
Study Chair
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Tue S Jørgensen, MD PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Hvidovre University Hospital, Denmark
Official's Role
Study Chair
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Malene RB Larsen, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Zealand University Hospital Koege, Denmark
Official's Role
Study Chair
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Stig Brorson, Professor, MD PhD DMsc
Organizational Affiliation
Zealand University Hospital Koege, Denmark
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Herlev University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
City
Herlev
ZIP/Postal Code
2730
Country
Denmark
Facility Name
Zealand University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
City
Køge
ZIP/Postal Code
4600
Country
Denmark

12. IPD Sharing Statement

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Treatment of Diabetic Foot Ulcers With Inforatio Technique to Promote Wound Healing

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