A Clinical Trial Design for Evaluating Topical Antimicrobials in Chronic Wounds: The BLEU Trial

Author:

Serena Thomas1ORCID,King Emily1,Boyer Theresa1,Harrell Khristina1

Affiliation:

1. SerenaGroup Research Foundation, Cambridge, MA 02140, USA

Abstract

Chronic wound management is a global challenge. Millions of patients suffer from nonhealing ulcers and health systems are overwhelmed by the growing demand for treatment. Despite the prevalence of chronic wounds, the emergence of wound centers and specialized physicians is a recent phenomenon. Likewise, clinical research in wound healing is in its infancy. To date, many of the products in wound care have little or no clinical evidence. The field needs standardized clinical trial design, endpoints recognized by clinicians and payers, and improved overall clinical evidence. Wound healing is impeded by the presence of bacterial biofilms, which exist in most chronic wounds. It is not surprising that biofilm disruption is the focus of wound management and essential to the healing process. Multiple laboratory and preclinical studies demonstrate promising efficacy of several antimicrobials in treating biofilms; however, the field lacks in vivo clinical studies. In addition, a standardized trial design to evaluate efficacy of antimicrobials in chronic wounds does not exist. The advent of new diagnostic technologies, such as fluorescence imaging, has led to clinical trial designs that are reliable, easier to conduct, and cost efficient. The protocol presented here describes a randomized controlled double-blind trial designed to evaluate antiseptics in chronic wounds.

Funder

Sanara MedTech

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Paleontology,Space and Planetary Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference17 articles.

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3. A study of biofilm based wound management in subjects with critical limb ischaemia;Wolcott;J. Wound Care,2008

4. Wound Biofilm: Current Perspectives and Strategies on Biofilm Disruption and Treatments;Snyder;Wounds,2017

5. Biofilm delays wound healing: A review of the evidence;Metcalf;Burn. Trauma,2013

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