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Inforatio Technique to Promote Wound Healing of Diabetic Foot Ulcers: a Parallel-group, Evaluator-blinded, Randomized Clinical Trial
This randomized clinical trial will examine the effect of inforatio technique on healing of diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). Inforatio technique is a novel procedure developed by the research group. The definition of inforatio technique is application of small cuts in wound beds with punch biopsy tools without involving surrounding epithelia. The aim is to initiate an acute inflammatory response that will promote healing of the ulcers.
BACKGROUND 15-25% of diabetic patients develop chronic foot ulcers - a serious comorbidity that widely affects quality of life and is associated with increased mortality and morbidity. 50-60% of DFUs become infected, and 20% of patients with infected DFUs undergo lower extremity amputation. Inforatio technique is a novel treatment of DFUs where small cuts are made in wound beds with punch biopsy tools without involving epithelia. The aim is to cause controlled bleeding and initiate an acute inflammatory response that may promote healing. The research group has conducted a preceding feasibility trial that showed promising results (see study by Moeini et al. in the reference list). Inforatio technique may become a supplemental treatment option for diabetic patients worldwide if it shows a beneficial effect on healing. TRIAL AIMS This trial aims to assess whether the proportion of ulcers that heal within 20 weeks is higher when DFUs are treated with inforatio technique in addition to usual wound care compared to treatment with usual wound care alone. RECRUITMENT Patients are eligibility-screened and identified by the investigators and wound care staff when patients visit the recruiting wound outpatient clinics. INCLUSION AND FOLLOW-UP Eligible patients are included if they give their oral and written consent to participate. The baseline trial visit takes place on the day that patients give their consent to participate. The trial comprises a 20-week clinical follow-up. Follow-up visits will be at 3, 6, 9, 12, 16 and 20 weeks after baseline (give or take 7 days for midtrial visits and from 20 to 22 weeks after baseline for the last trial visit). Follow-up end whenever the following appears; 20-week follow-up visit, death, amputation, or the outpatient clinic staff observes healing. The trial will be stopped if the intervention shows an unintended effect or potential harm. RANDOMIZATION Allocation of participants is conducted by block randomization with stratification by center and will be generated with Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap)©. Block sizes will be randomly alternating between two and four. The allocation will immediately be revealed to the participant and wound care staff. Adequate allocation concealment is ensured by the irreversibility of randomization and the inability to predict the next allocation assignment in RedCap. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS PLAN Baseline characteristics will be reported with appropriate descriptive statistics. The analyses of primary and secondary outcomes will be performed on the intention-to-treat population with participants being analyzed as randomized regardless of the treatment received. Supplementary analyses will be performed on the per-protocol population, which excludes participants with one or more serious protocol violations as defined below: * Participants not receiving their allocated treatment. * Participants with inadequate adherence, which is defined as the following: * Participants that miss more than 3 of the 6 follow-up trial visits. * Participants in the intervention group that miss more than 2 of the 4 trial visits where inforatio is applied. The primary analysis of the trial will be a logistic regression for proportion of healed ulcers with adjustment for center of recruitment. EQ-5D-5L and Wound-QoL data will be presented descriptively in line with the guidelines for the questionnaires. A multivariate linear regression adjusting for baseline score will be performed for analysis of change in EQ-5D-5L index score and Wound-QoL global score. Safety outcome will be descriptively reported and analyzed on 'as treated' basis where participants are grouped according to whether they received inforatio technique. Mean time and range from the last inforatio applied to an event is detected will be reported for the intervention group. A statistical comparison between groups will be conducted by chi square test and estimates of relative risk with 95% confidence interval. Inforatio-related adverse events will be descriptively reported. An interim analyses will be performed after 50 participant has completed follow-up. Significance is set at p-value \<0.05 and p-values are two-tailed. Underlying statistical assumptions for linear and logistic regressions will be assessed graphically. HANDLING OF MISSING DATA Data on Wound-QoL global score that is missing due to death during follow-up, will not be considered in the handling of missing data. Otherwise, missing data on primary and secondary outcomes will be handled according to recommendations by Jakobsen et al. (see reference list). If the proportion of missing data on an outcome is \<5%, the primary analysis of missing data will be complete-case analyses. If more than 5% data of an outcome is missing, the primary analysis will include missing data imputed by multiple imputation technique and complete case analysis will be performed as a sensitivity analysis. In both cases, a best-worst and worst-best case analysis will be conducted for missing data on healing. SAMPLE SIZE A meta analysis by Margolis et al. (see reference list) has reported a healing rate of 30.9% (95% CI 26.6-35.1) in 20 weeks for non-infected DFUs that were treated with standard wound care. A healing rate of 60% in 20 weeks was suggested by the preceding feasibility trial when patients receive inforatio technique in addition to usual wound care. When the power is 80% and the alpha-level is 5%, a power calculation gives a sample size of 84 for comparison of two proportions when the outcome proportion is 30% for the control group and the aim is to assess whether the outcome improves with 30 percentage points in the intervention group. To allow an attrition of 20%, the aim is to recruit 100 participants for the trial. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS AND RISK ASSESSMENT OF SIDE EFFECTS Inforatio technique is a minimal invasive procedure. Thus, no adverse events are expected as a result of inforatio technique except from a low risk of pain during application. In the preceding feasibility trial, no intervention-related adverse events were observed and participants did not experience pain during application. Furthermore, inforatio technique showed a promising effect on healing. The clinical assessment of the wound care staff, patient preference and patient tolerance is taken into consideration before inforatio technique is applied. If the inforatio technique shows a significant positive effect on healing, it would become of great importance for future patients as a supplemental treatment to standard wound care of DFUs. COMPETING INTERESTS The trial investigators declare that they have no competing interests.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Herlev University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Herlev, Denmark
Zealand University Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Køge, Denmark
Nykoebing Falster Hospital
Nykøbing Falster, Denmark
Slagelse Hospital, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Slagelse, Denmark
Start Date
March 10, 2022
Primary Completion Date
February 1, 2025
Completion Date
February 1, 2025
Last Updated
August 16, 2024
100
ESTIMATED participants
Inforatio technique
PROCEDURE
Usual care of the respective outpatient clinics
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Zealand University Hospital
Collaborators
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT07296484