Benefits of sucrose octasulfate (TLC-NOSF) dressings in the treatment of chronic wounds: a systematic review

Author:

Nair Harikrishna1,Venkateshwaran N2,Seetharaman S Selva3,Deng Wuquan4,Uthaipaisanwong Apinan5,Galea Emilio6

Affiliation:

1. Head and Consultant, Wound Care Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Malaysia

2. Consultant Plastic and Cosmetic Surgery, Jupiter Hospital, Mumbai, India

3. Consultant and Head of Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Gleneagles Global Hospital, Chennai, India

4. Head of Endocrinology Department. Chongqing Emergency Medical Centre, Chongqing University Central Hospital, Chongqing, China

5. Department of Surgery, King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Patumwan, Bangkok, Thailand

6. International Medical Director, Urgo Education and Training Alliance, Singapore

Abstract

Objective: Management of chronic wounds remains one of the major challenges for health professionals and patients. An evidence-based decision is important to ensure that patients are receiving the best treatment proven to reduce healing time and improve outcomes, including economic benefits and patients' health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Due to recent restrictions because of the COVID-19 pandemic, including closure of wound care centres within hospitals and a drop in patient volume, chronic wound management needs simple-to-use dressings which are still effective and evidence-based solutions. This systematic review was conducted to identify the clinical evidence available on a sucrose octasulfate dressing (TLC-NOSF, UrgoStart dressing range, Laboratoires Urgo, France) to explore its efficacy in the management of chronic wounds, particularly lower limb ulcers, diabetic foot ulcers and pressure ulcers. Method: A literature search of PubMed, Cochrane Library and Google Scholar was conducted based on the PICO model (patient/population, intervention, comparison and outcomes) to retrieve publications of different levels of evidence in order to evaluate outcomes of the use of TLC-NOSF dressings. Results: A total of 21 publications of different levels, ranging from double-blind randomised control trials to case reports, involving over 12,000 patients, were identified through PubMed, with a further eight publications through Google Scholar and two publications through Cochrane Library. A total of seven results were omitted due to the lack of relevance or repetition. Conclusion: All the evidence provided suggest that these dressings provide clinicians with an evidence-based option for the management of chronic wounds; that the TLC-NOSF dressings are beneficial in promoting the healing process, reducing healing times, enhancing patients' HRQoL, and in allowing a more cost-effective procedure.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Fundamentals and skills

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