Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT04893863

A Study of Plurogel® Compared to Standard Topical Dressing in Burn Injuries

A Within Patient, Pilot Randomized Controlled Study of Plurogel® Compared to Standard Topical Dressing in Burn Injuries

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
20 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Manitoba · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Burn injuries can result in long term physical and mental sequelae, not only from the scarring but also the painful dressings. The standard of care today remains use of antibiotic topical dressings while awaiting demarcation of the burn depth, with surgical excision and grafting for deep partial thickness and full thickness areas. Demarcation can be appreciated on admission for full thickness burns but is often a prolonged process that can last weeks. The clinical evaluation of the depth of the burn is a complex decision that often is made more challenging by the presence of the proteinaceous pseudoeschar and the coagulated dermis itself. Surgical debridement is relatively 'coarse' and by its very nature requires removal of a thin layer of viable tissue to reach the level that is vascularized enough to support a skin graft. There has been growing interest in the use of adjuncts to reduce the amount tissue debrided and potentially reduce the need for surgery itself. Operatively, there have been some reports that use of hydro-dissection devices (Versajet™) may allow a more controlled debridement, resulting in less viable tissue being sacrificed. There is also a growing experience with enzymatic debridement, especially with Bromolein, derived from Pineapple (NexoBrid®). Neither of these have been shown to definitively improve care in randomized controlled trials, (RCTs) and there is suggestion that in some settings may actually cause harm.

Detailed description

Burn injuries can result in long term physical and mental sequelae, not only from the scarring but also the painful dressings. The standard of care today remains use of antibiotic topical dressings while awaiting demarcation of the burn depth, with surgical excision and grafting for deep partial thickness and full thickness areas. Demarcation can be appreciated on admission for full thickness burns but is often a prolonged process that can last weeks. The clinical evaluation of the depth of the burn is a complex decision that often is made more challenging by the presence of the proteinaceous pseudoeschar and the coagulated dermis itself. Surgical debridement is relatively 'coarse' and by its very nature requires removal of a thin layer of viable tissue to reach the level that is vascularized enough to support a skin graft. There has been growing interest in the use of adjuncts to reduce the amount tissue debrided and potentially reduce the need for surgery itself. Operatively, there have been some reports that use of hydro-dissection devices (Versajet™) may allow a more controlled debridement, resulting in less viable tissue being sacrificed. There is also a growing experience with enzymatic debridement, especially with Bromolein, derived from Pineapple (NexoBrid®). Neither of these have been shown to definitively improve care in randomized controlled trials, (RCTs) and there is suggestion that in some settings may actually cause harm. A relatively recent entry into the 'space' of non-surgical burn wound debridement is Plurogel®. Unlike Bromolein, Plurogel® is a concentrated surfactant in the form of a stable, viscous gel. Each micelle has a hydrophilic outer surface that softens and loosens wound debris, and a hydrophobic inner core that traps debris. The micelles link to form a matrix that continually expands and contracts. This creates a cleansing/rinsing action that disrupts the surface tension holding slough and necrotic tissue in place. PluroGel® helps in creating a moist wound healing environment, which softens, loosens and drives slough and necrotic debris away from the wound bed, promoting autolytic debridement. PluroGel® is approved for use in burn injuries in Canada, however there are no randomized control trials (RCTs) to support its use. As Plurogel® appears to fill a much-needed niche in burn wound care, and as our centre seeks to be innovative in patient care, we trialed Plurogel® on some of our appropriately consented burn patients. The anecdotal experience is that the eschar lifted within about a week and there was visible wound healing. Healing time appeared to be reduced as the product would gently debride while still providing a moist wound bed encouraging wound healing. Team members began to value the new product. This early positive experience is the impetus for us to embark on a pilot RCT to provide evidence for us to continue to use this product.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGStandard dressingTopical antibiotic ointment (Polysporin™ or formulary equivalent) and non-adherent petrolatum fine-meshed gauze (ADAPTIC™) applied every Monday, Wednesday and Friday (or equivalent).
DRUGPluroGelA 0.5 cm layer of PluroGel® followed by the above standard dressing. In addition, this will be covered with moistened gauze, kept moist twice daily. (The additional factors are the use of PluroGel® and moistened gauze. Standard dressing will continue to be used.)

Timeline

Start date
2021-10-01
Primary completion
2026-12-31
Completion
2027-06-01
First posted
2021-05-20
Last updated
2024-12-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04893863. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.