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Showing 1-20 of 42 trials
NCT06642051
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the Sonablate High Intensity Focused Ultrasound device can be safely used to treat patients with Chronic Venous Incompetence (CVI) including those with venous malformations of the periphery meaning legs, abdomen, chest or back. Examples of CVI are varicose veins, vascular congestion, venous ulcer, venous clusters, venous anomalies, mixed malformation, Klippel-Trenaunay Syndrome, CLOVES, Syndrome, Blue Rubber bleb Nevus Syndrome. HIFU is a non-invasive treatment as opposed to current treatment options which include incisions, needle penetration, wire insertions or catheter insertions.
NCT07123285
This randomized, controlled, double-blind clinical trial will evaluate the efficacy of photobiomodulation (PBM) combined with compression therapy in the healing of venous ulcers (VUs) in the lower limbs. A total of 96 participants will be allocated into two groups: Experimental Group (PBM + compression) and Control Group (sham PBM + compression). Treatments will be administered twice weekly for 16 weeks (32 sessions). The primary outcome will be complete wound healing. Secondary outcomes include changes in ulcer area and volume, pain (VAS), quality of life (SF-36), clinical severity (VCSS), wound quality (Bates-Jensen Scale), infrared thermography, and treatment costs. Data will be analyzed using ANOVA or Kruskal-Wallis, chi-square or Fisher's exact test, and Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, with a significance level of p \< 0.05.
NCT03250247
The purpose of this study is to determine if the use of image-guided, endovascular therapy (EVT) is an effective strategy with which to reduce Post Thrombotic Syndrome (PTS) disease severity and improve quality of life in patients with established disabling iliac-obstructive post thrombotic syndrome (DIO-PTS).
NCT06811909
This study examines a patient population with a non-healing, non-infected venous leg ulcer (VLU) having adequate arterial perfusion with confirmed venous reflux. It is hypothesized that weekly applications of the human placental allograft BioREtain® Amnion Chorion (BR-AC) applied to a non-healing VLU will result in a higher proportion of wounds showing complete healing within 12 weeks of initiating therapy, compared to standard care alone. This study has a crossover period, where subjects on standard care alone who do not achieve complete healing within 12 weeks of initiating therapy will be allowed to crossover to receive BR-AC over 12 additional weeks, to evaluate if their wound can achieve complete healing.
NCT07335861
This is a randomized controlled trial evaluating the efficacy of HYALOMATRIX in conjunction with standard of care vs. standard of care alone in treating venous leg ulcers.
NCT06510777
This study intends to demonstrate the superiority of PICO treatment when applied up to 12 weeks, versus Standard of Care (SOC) in the treatment of hard to heal Venous Leg Ulcers (VLU) by community-based practitioners. The primary endpoint is the incidence of confirmed healed VLUs at 12 weeks or before, in the PICO treatment group versus the SOC group. The study hypothesis is based on the Kirsner study (Kirsner R, Dove C, Reyzelman A, Vayser D, Jaimes H. A prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial on the efficacy of a single-use negative pressure wound therapy system, compared to traditional negative pressure wound therapy in the treatment of chronic ulcers of the lower extremities. Wound Repair Regen. 2019 Sep;27(5):519-529)), which compared PICO treatment to traditional NPWT (t-NPWT); the ITT analysis in the subgroup of patients with VLU showed 45.1% wound closure (confirmed wound healing) at 12 weeks in the PICO group as compared to 28% in the t-NPWT group, yielding a difference of 17.1%, 95% Confidence Interval = (-1.9%;+35.4%). For our study, the Sponsor made the assumptions that the t-NPWT healing proportion (28%) can be used as conservative estimate for the control group proportion and that the PICO group should provide at least a 17% improvement over standard of care. Adaptative design is chosen to adjust the sample size using the re-assessment size method to preserve alpha risk (α) level.
NCT07287254
Objective: To evaluate the effects of different types of music (instrumental Turkish music and Western music without lyrics) played during wound care on pain, anxiety, and patient satisfaction among individuals with venous ulcers. Methods: In this randomized controlled trial, 97 patients with venous ulcers were assigned to three groups: Western Music (n=32), Turkish Music (n=32), and Control (n=33). Patients in the music groups listened to their assigned music during routine wound dressing, while all patients received individualized, evidence-based care. Pain and anxiety were measured with VAS and STAI before, during, and after dressing, and patient satisfaction was assessed with VAS post-procedure.
NCT05489588
This study is a prospective, non-randomized, multicenter, single-arm, clinical study to evaluate the performance, safety and efficacy of the GORE® VIABAHN® FORTEGRA Venous Stent (formerly known as GORE® VIAFORT Vascular Stent) for treatment of symptomatic iliofemoral venous obstruction.
NCT03621592
The goal of the study is to investigate the effectiveness of Cutimed Sorbact (Study Device) in modifying bacterial load in venous leg ulcers (VLU).
NCT06606210
INNOVEN is a multi-center randomized controlled clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of porcine placental extracellular matrix (PPECM) and standard of care (SOC) versus SOC alone in the closure of non-healing venous leg ulcers (VLUs).
NCT06544564
This study is designed to assess the clinical effectiveness of Membrane Wrap, a human amniotic membrane for the management of difficult to heal partial- or full-thickness venous leg ulcers (VLUs)
NCT07031180
Background: Venous ulcers are skin lesions caused by impaired blood circulation. In Western countries, about 1% of the population is affected, and approximately 3% those over 80 years old. Venous leg ulcers tend to become chronic; a lesion is defined as chronic when it does not progress towards spontaneous healing. The treatment of these lesions inevitably involves long healing times, which results in increased healthcare costs. Moreover, venous leg ulcers have recurrence rates ranging from 18% to 28%. For this reason, it is important to support patients affected by or at risk of venous ulcers during their healing process or for prevention. Objectives: The primary objective of the study is to assess the superiority of the educational interventions to the standard therapeutic education, in improving the patient's/caregiver's self-efficacy, after 4 weeks, 3, 6 and 12 months from the educational intervention begin. The secondary objectives are to clinically assess the impact of the educational intervention in decreasing healing time and recurrence rates and in patients' well-being after 12 months of follow-up. Additionally, the Well-being of Wounds Inventory (WOW-I) questionnaire will be validated in its Italian version. Methods: the study is a two arm moncentric randomized-controlled trial. The participants will be randomly assigned into two groups. The control group will receive an educational intervention through a pamphlet, which represents the standard education received in the outpatient clinics involved in the study. The intervention group instead will receive an experimental educational intervention through video played specifically for this study. The socio-demografic, health and ulcer related factors will be collected and the questionnaires: venous leg ulcer knowledge (VLUK), Venous Leg Ulcer Self-Efficacy Tool (VeLUSET) and Well-being Of Wounds Inventory (WOW I) will be administered to the patients during the outpatient clinic visit, before the treatment and after 4 weeks, 3 and 6 months after the intervention. The study also includes a telephonic follow up at 12 months from the start carried out to assess if the patient's venous ulcer has healed or recurred.
NCT05873257
The goal of this study is to test a new gelling fiber wound dressing with silver on patients with a venous leg ulcer Participants will be asked to wear the test dressing in a four weeks period (+/- 2 days) consisting of 6 study visits, and will have the dressing changed once pr. week at the research facility. The wound will be cleaned, assessed and photos will be uploaded to a digital software system.
NCT04689009
Multi-center, prospective,randomized controlled study on the speed of healing, life quality and cost-effectiveness of the treatment with a blue light medical device (EmoLED) versus existing Standards Of Care (SOC) for patients with leg ulcers. The aim of LUCE - "Leg Ulcers Standards of Care Enhancement" clinical trial is to verify the clinical efficacy of a portable battery-powered device blue LEDs based. This study aims to compare the existing SOC (consisting in two visits per week) to a protocol that requires only one visit per week, during which the EmoLED treatment is administered in addition to the current therapy. It is expected to register a difference in efficacy between EmoLED Group and SOC Group, in terms of "healing rate", intended as a reduction of the wound area, but also as a progress, in a broad sense, of the overall clinical situation of the lesion, in terms of pain and quality of life. -Endpoint- The primary endpoint is the comparison of the outcomes in terms of healing rate of lesions treated with SOC (SOC Group) versus lesions treated with EmoLED (EmoLED Group), on week 16th. Patients 80 patients will be recruited (40 patients per group), following these inclusion/exclusion criteria: Inclusion criteria: * Subjects suffering from venous and mixed skin ulcers; * Presence of a lesion \< 100 cm² of area and \< 1 cm in depth; * Men and women ≥ 18 years old; * The patient must be able to understand the aims of the clinical trial and provide informed consent in writing; * Chronicity of the lesion: at least 8 weeks. Exclusion criteria: * Patients who participated in clinical trials about skin ulcers healing during the previous month; * Patients who are not able to understand the aims of the trial; * Patients with pressure ulcers; * Patients with diabetic foot ulcers; * Patients with circumferential leg ulcer (due to the difficulties in analysing the pictures); * Patients with clearly infected ulcers or with systemic infection; * Patients with ulcers caused by critical ischemia; * Patients with a self-harm past that can purposely alter the process of healing; * Patients with psychiatric disorders; * Pregnancy or breast feeding; * Patients with neoplasms or other diseases involving the use of cytostatic or immunosuppressive drugs; * Patients with limited lifespan; * Patients with photosensitizing illnesses or that take photosensitizing drugs. All inclusion and exclusion criteria must be satisfied before recruitment. Any concomitant phar-macological therapy must be maintained. -Medical and surgical procedures- The lesions will be cleansed with saline solution and, if necessary, surgical debridement will be performed with the most suitable method. At this point, if patient is included in EmoLED Group, the EmoLED treatment starts. After EmoLED application (EmoLED Group) or after cleansing (SOC Group), a polyurethane foam dressing will be applied on the lesion. In case of clinical signs of infection, a silver dressing will be applied. Then an elasto-compressive double layer dressing of the limb with cohesive fixation bielastic la-tex-free bandage will be carried out. The treatment with EmoLED, in addition to the SOC, will be performed during each visit for 60 seconds on each 5 cm diameter sub-area of the selected lesion. In case of multiple lesions matching with both inclusion and exclusion criteria, they will be all treated following the same protocol, depending on the group to which the patient belongs; in this case the Principal Investigator will fill out a data-collection form and take pictures just of the le-sion with the wider area. -Follow up procedure- The patient is called upon to go to the follow-up check after 4 weeks from the healing or, other-wise, from the end of the trial (16 weeks). The follow-up visit will be used to confirm the occurred healing and verify the absence of relapses and/or undesirable effects (if the wound appeared completely healed) or to value the healing progress for the unhealed lesions.
NCT05549609
The aim of the study is to assess safety, tolerability and preliminary efficacy of XSTEM-VLU when administered as a single topical dose to patients with difficult-to-heal venous leg ulcers. The study is randomised and the patients will receive either XSTEM-VLU or vehicle as add on to standard wound care. The patients will be followed weekly for 10 weeks after treatment. At 4 months after treatment, the patients will return to the clinic for an end-of-study visit.
NCT03796793
The goal of this project is to use genomic profiling, candidate genes and proteins to develop guided surgical debridement to improve healing in chronic non-healing venous leg ulcers (VLUs) and to test the efficacy of this approach.
NCT06255288
The objective of this study is to examine the feasibility, acceptability, fidelity, and outcome of a nurse-led nutritional intervention for patients with leg ulcers in a outpatient clinics. The intervention consists of a structured dialogue and patient information on key lifestyle behaviours to improve wound healing. Furthermore, the intervention includes protein supplement.
NCT04737941
This multicenter randomized controlled trial evaluates the effect of first-visit foam sclerotherapy (including sub-ulcer foam sclerotherapy) in patients with venous leg ulcer.
NCT05894096
In this medical trial, a novel prototype of a medical device based on a Cold Atmospheric Air Plasma Jet for the treatment is clinically tested on patients with venous leg ulcers. The device is characterized by producing the first cold air plasma jet compatible with living tissues at a low heat transfer rate with a temperature on the skin surface lower than 40 ºC. It has a practical design to be used by physicians during daily practice with a special focus on unhealed ulcers.
NCT04019340
Background and rationale: Venous leg ulcers (VLU) are slow healing wounds with a recurrence rate of 70% and a 60% risk of becoming chronic. The estimated VLU prevalence in the general population is 3%. Current therapeutic approaches are multifaceted and focus on reducing wound size and improving wound healing as well as preventing ulcer recurrence. They require a pluridisciplinary team of health care professionals from the domains of nursing, medicine, physiotherapy and nutrition. Approximately 70% of VLU patients have a knowledge deficit in regards to therapeutic measures and have difficulties with adherence to treatment protocols. However, there are no published studies describing and evaluating the impact of pluridisciplinary educational interventions on adherence to the treatment plan and wound size reduction in VLU patients. Overall objectives: The objectives of the projected study are to evaluate the effectiveness of nurse-led intervention for high-risk patients with VLU in terms of patient knowledge/therapy adherence and to measure the impact of this intervention on wound size reduction and its evolution over time. Methodology of the planned study: An international multicenter randomized controlled trial with 248 participants in three Swiss French (n= 124) and two Australian (n=124) wound clinics is proposed. The sample size assumptions are based on a two-sided alpha level of 0.05, power of 0.8, and a medium effect size. Univariate and bivariate analysis will be conducted according to the data level and distribution. Expected results and impact: The findings of this study will generate new knowledge and the results will contribute to VLU clinical practice guidelines to enhance patient adherence to therapy. Our results will not only help improving patients' quality of life, but also contribute to reducing health expenditure.