EmoLED Medical Device Treatment of Second and Third Stage Pressure Ulcers
NCT ID: NCT05130814
Last Updated: 2025-01-28
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
48 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-12-01
2024-03-07
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Recognizing the considerable economic, health and social impact of pressure ulcers has led to considerable efforts to reduce their occurrence. Nevertheless, pressure ulcers continue to occur. Although not all pressure ulcers are iatrogenic, most of them can be prevented. Pressure ulcers are one of the most frequent iatrogenic lesions in developed countries.
Inadequate treatment methods, such as leaving vulnerable patients in potentially harmful positions for long periods, or massaging reddened skin areas, often continue to be perpetuated even if it has been proven that they are damaging or ineffective.
Pressure, that is often associated to a limitation in mobility of the patient, for a long time has been considered the most important extrinsic factor in the development of pressure ulcers.
However, recent research, and still ongoing, is revealing that shear forces, friction, and microclimate also play an important role in the etiology of pressure ulcers, and that, also, some significant and complex relationships between all these extrinsic factors exist.
In alert patients, the effects of prolonged pressure usually stimulate frequent light body movements to relieve the load and restore tissue perfusion. Unconscious, sedated, anesthetized or paralyzed patients cannot feel or respond to these stimuli and do not move spontaneously. As a result, skin and soft tissue can be exposed to prolonged and without relief pressure.
PUs are generally more common in anatomical locations that cover a bone prominence. In adults, the most common sites are the sacrum and the heel. Other frequently affected anatomical locations are ischium, ankle, elbow and hip.
Pressure ulcers are often difficult to diagnose, in particular it is easy to confuse them with moisture-caused injuries. A correct diagnosis is essential to determine both prevention and treatment plans.
For a proper management of pressure lesions it is essential to take into account their characteristics (location, color, size, amount of exudate, type of tissue, smell, edges) and to consider the condition of the peri-lesional skin (erythema, edema, hardening, maceration). To describe the state of a pressure ulcer, EPUAP (European Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel) and NPUAP (National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel) recommend to divide pressure injuries stages from 1 to 4:
* Stage 1 - Persistent erythema Intact skin with redness not reversible to acupressure in a localized area, usually above a bone prominence. Stage 1 may indicate a patient at risk.
* Stage 2 - Partial thickness tissue loss Loss of the dermis at partial thickness, which looks like a shallow and open ulcer, with red - pinkish lesion bed, without slough. It may also present as a vesicle, intact or open/broken, serous and/or haematic.
* Stage 3 - Total Thickness Tissue Loss Loss of tissue at total thickness. Subcutaneous fat may be visible, but bones, tendons or muscles are not exposed. There may be slough, which does not hide the depth of tissue loss. It may include undermining wounds and tunneling.
* Stage 4 - Loss of subcutaneous tissue Loss of tissue at total thickness with exposure of bones, tendons or muscles. There may be slough or eschar on some parts of the lesion bed. Undermining wounds and tunneling are often present. Stage 4 injuries can extend to muscle and to support structures.
* Not classifiable lesion Loss of tissue at total thickness, where the base of the ulcer is covered by slough (yellow, brown, grey, green or brown) and/or eschar (brown, brown or black) in the bed of the lesion.
The commercial purpose of this study is to value the clinical efficacy of a battery-powered device that uses blue LEDs.
The study aims to compare the response of an existing standard treatment for second and third stage pressure sores, with a protocol that plans the administration of the EmoLED treatment three times a week for 4 consecutive weeks in addition to the conventional therapy.
The Study has an indicative duration of 12 months with an expected enrollment period of 10 months. The study, however, will continue until the number of patients required by this protocol is reached.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Control Group
The Control Group will follow the standard treatment indicated three times a week for the 4 weeks of observation.
The standard treatment for 2° and 3° stage PU consists of: cleansing with saline or ringer's lactate, hyaluronic acid gauze plus polyurethane foam every 48 hours or as needed. In addition, zinc cream or hyaluronic acid sodium salt + metallic silver is applied to prevent and/or treat the skin maceration of the surrounding area, and eventual debridement of the lesion, application of topical treatment indicated for that stage of the lesion (as provided by the "Protocol on pressure ulcers' dressing" intended as the "standard of care" of the structure) and subsequent bandage (that generally consists of a polyurethane film -thin hydrocolloid plate or a pressure discharge system made with hydrocolloids and polyurethane foam, known as "pressure relief system"), are planned.
cleansing
cleaning of the wound area with saline or ringer's lactate
hyaluronic acid gauze plus polyurethane foam
every 48 hours or as needed
zinc cream or hyaluronic acid sodium salt + metallic silver
applied to prevent and/or treat the skin maceration of the surrounding area
topical treatment
topical treatment indicated for that stage of the lesion
bandage
it consists of a polyurethane film -thin hydrocolloid plate or a pressure discharge system made with hydrocolloids and polyurethane foam, known as "pressure relief system"
EmoLED Group
The Experimental Group will undergo, in addition to the standard treatment, treatment with Emoled three times a week for 4 consecutive weeks.
This treatment consists of irradiation with the blue light emitted by the device for one minute on the injured area. If the lesion has a greater extension than the irradiated area, multiple repeated applications will be performed, on adjacent areas, until the entire area is covered.
The treatment with EmoLED will be carried out in correspondence with the dressing change of the lesion.
blue light photobiomodulation
1 minute irradiation of blue light performed with EmoLED device.
cleansing
cleaning of the wound area with saline or ringer's lactate
hyaluronic acid gauze plus polyurethane foam
every 48 hours or as needed
zinc cream or hyaluronic acid sodium salt + metallic silver
applied to prevent and/or treat the skin maceration of the surrounding area
topical treatment
topical treatment indicated for that stage of the lesion
bandage
it consists of a polyurethane film -thin hydrocolloid plate or a pressure discharge system made with hydrocolloids and polyurethane foam, known as "pressure relief system"
Interventions
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blue light photobiomodulation
1 minute irradiation of blue light performed with EmoLED device.
cleansing
cleaning of the wound area with saline or ringer's lactate
hyaluronic acid gauze plus polyurethane foam
every 48 hours or as needed
zinc cream or hyaluronic acid sodium salt + metallic silver
applied to prevent and/or treat the skin maceration of the surrounding area
topical treatment
topical treatment indicated for that stage of the lesion
bandage
it consists of a polyurethane film -thin hydrocolloid plate or a pressure discharge system made with hydrocolloids and polyurethane foam, known as "pressure relief system"
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients with 2° or 3° stage pressure ulcers with a ≥ 2cm² lesion area;
* Patients with a hospitalization waiting time \< 30 day;
* Men and women aged ≥ 50 years;
* Patients with a Braden scale score ≥ 11;
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with third stage pressure lesions, on the lower limbs or on the sacrum, with undermining wounds, tunneling or eschar;
* Patients with systemic or superficial infection at the time of recruitment, that need systemic antibiotic therapy;
* Patients with a history of self-harm who can voluntarily alter the course of healing;
* Patients under intravenous therapy with doses of corticosteroids above 40mg/day;
* Patients under immunosuppressant or cytostatic drugs therapy;
* Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding1;
* Patients with neoplasia;
* Patients with pathologies that induce skin photosensitivity;
* Patients with a life expectancy of less than 30 days.
50 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Emoled
INDUSTRY
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Stefano Gasperini
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Medical Advisor
Claudio Macchi
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
IRCCS Don Carlo Gnocchi
Locations
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IRCCS Don Carlo Gnocchi
Florence, , Italy
Countries
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References
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Dollaku H, Dalladonna M, Giuliano M, Rossi M, Barbetti P, Marcolongo MS, Buccione E, Iovino P, Macchi C. Randomized clinical trial of the efficacy of the EmoLED medical device in the treatment of stage 2 and stage 3 pressure ulcers: The RISE_UP study. J Tissue Viability. 2025 Aug;34(3):100895. doi: 10.1016/j.jtv.2025.100895. Epub 2025 Mar 26.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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EmoLED_005
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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