Wool-derived Keratin Dressings for Venous Leg Ulcers

NCT ID: NCT02896725

Last Updated: 2020-07-24

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

143 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-03-01

Study Completion Date

2019-09-30

Brief Summary

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Venous leg ulcers (VLU) are the most common leg ulcer, can be painful, and limit work, lifestyles and activity, especially in older patients. Compression bandaging is the main treatment but there are few added treatments for patients with slow healing VLU. About 50% of patients with VLU may be slow healing. Research suggests using keratin dressings as well as using compression may help healing in patients with show healing VLU, but the current evidence is not enough to change clinical practice. The investigators will conduct a randomised controlled trial to test whether using keratin dressings is better than usual care for slow healing VLU.

Detailed Description

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A pragmatic, community based, single-blind, usual care-controlled, randomised trial to determine whether keratin dressings increase the proportion of patients with venous leg ulcers healed at 24 weeks when used in addition to compression in patients with slow healing venous leg ulcers. Participants in have compression therapy (system of choice guided by patient and/or clinical preference) as delivered through district nursing services at the study centres as a background treatment. Keratin dressings will be applied when the compression bandage is changed (approximately weekly). Usual care dressings will consist of the usual formulary of moist wound dressings available at each study centre.

Participants will be district nursing service patients in five study centres in New Zealand with prevalent or incident venous leg ulcers. A venous leg ulcer will be defined as a wound on the lower leg that has remained unhealed for 4 or more weeks, appears to be primarily venous in aetiology with other causative diseases ruled out. If the participant has two or more venous leg ulcers, the largest ulcer will be the reference ulcer. A participant will be considered to have a slow healing venous leg ulcer if the ulcer area is larger than 5 cm2 and/or the ulcer has been present for more than six months.

Participants will receive up to four visits from the research nurse - visit 1 to screen for eligibility, visit 2 to consent and randomise the participant, visits 3 and 4 to collect outcome data. District nurses will continue to visit the participant (about weekly or more frequently if required) to provide routine care between research nurse visits.

Block randomisation will be used, stratified by study centre and prognostic index (ulcer size greater than 5cm2 and/or ulcer duration greater than 6 months) to ensure a balance of participants within study centres and for participants likely to be slow healers. Research nurses will input information on inclusion criteria, exclusion criteria, and relevant clinical history on consented participants via a tablet computer. The allocation will be generated after this information has been entered. Randomised participants will receive the allocated treatment until the reference ulcer heals or data collection is completed, whichever occurs sooner.

Conditions

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Varicose Ulcer

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Participants allocated to receive either keratin dressing or usual care dressing
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Outcome Assessors
Healing status for primary and secondary outcomes are adjudicated by blinded review of photographs of healed reference ulcer site or unhealed reference

Study Groups

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Keratin dressings

Wool-derived keratin matrix dressing applied with each change of the compression bandage until healing

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Keratin dressings

Intervention Type DEVICE

Wool-derived keratin matrix dressings applied with each change of the compression bandage until healing or the trial ends

Usual care dressings

Dressing chosen from study centres' formulary of non-medicated moist wound dressings applied with each change of the compression bandage until healing

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Usual care dressings

Intervention Type DEVICE

Dressings chosen from study centres' formulary of non-medicated moist wound dressings (non-adherent dressings, hydrogel, alginate, hydrofibre or polyurethane foam dressings) applied with each change of the compression bandage until healing or the trial ends

Interventions

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Keratin dressings

Wool-derived keratin matrix dressings applied with each change of the compression bandage until healing or the trial ends

Intervention Type DEVICE

Usual care dressings

Dressings chosen from study centres' formulary of non-medicated moist wound dressings (non-adherent dressings, hydrogel, alginate, hydrofibre or polyurethane foam dressings) applied with each change of the compression bandage until healing or the trial ends

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Clinical indications of venous leg ulceration
* Ankle Brachial Index ≥ 0.7
* Able to tolerate compression therapy
* Ulcer area \> 5cm2 and/or ulcer duration \> 6 months
* Able to provide informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria

* Hypersensitivity to wool or wool alcohols
* Venous leg ulceration with exposed tendon or bone
* Infected venous leg ulcer at trial inception (eligible after infection resolved)
* Venous leg ulcer with critical bioburden at trial inception (eligible if resolved)
* History of rheumatoid arthritis or vasculitis
* Uncontrolled diabetes
* Severe liver, heart, or renal failure
* Severe peripheral arterial disease
* Suspected or diagnosed skin malignancy
* Other threat to safe participation.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Health Research Council, New Zealand

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Auckland, New Zealand

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Andrew Jull

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Andrew Jull, RN PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

National Institute for Health Innovation, University of Auckland

Locations

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University of Auckland

Auckland, , New Zealand

Site Status

Countries

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New Zealand

References

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Jull A, Wadham A, Bullen C, Parag V, Waters J. Wool-derived keratin dressings versus usual care dressings for treatment of slow-healing venous leg ulceration: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial (Keratin4VLU). BMJ Open. 2018 Feb 13;8(2):e020319. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020319.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 29440219 (View on PubMed)

Jull A, Wadham A, Bullen C, Parag V, Weller C, Waters J. Wool-derived keratin dressings versus usual care dressings for treatment of slow healing venous leg ulceration: a randomised controlled trial (Keratin4VLU). BMJ Open. 2020 Jul 20;10(7):e036476. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-036476.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 32690743 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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U1111-1186-5202

Identifier Type: OTHER

Identifier Source: secondary_id

Keratin4VLU

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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