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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Terminated

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04014400
Other study ID # 19-1048
Secondary ID
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date July 7, 2019
Est. completion date July 23, 2020

Study information

Verified date October 2020
Source University of Colorado, Denver
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The investigators aim to study whether Suprathel, a synthetic temporary skin substitute developed by PolyMedics Innovations GmBH aids in the management of patient pain and wound healing when compared to the current standard dressing used of a primary Xeroform dressing.


Description:

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Study Design


Intervention

Other:
Suprathel or Xeroform donor site application
The surgical procedure for recovery of a skin graft will be the same for all patients as follows. Once the patient is taken to the operating room, the selected donor site will be prepared and harvested with a Zimmer Dermatome set at 0.007 to 0.009 thousands of an inch for pediatric patients and 0.12 to 0.14 thousands for adult patients. After the harvesting procedure, the donor site will be covered with Telfa saturated with 1:10,000 epinephrine in normal saline until hemostasis is achieved. The Telfa will be irrigated off the donor site with the epinephrine saline solution. The surgeon will don a new pair of sterile gloves to handle the donor site dressing. The randomized dressing will be applied over the hemostatic donor site with an approximate 1-2cm border. Next, the wound will be dressed with 4x4 cotton gauze pads (fluffs), rolled gauze (Kerlix) and either Coban or BandNet.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Children's Hospital Colorado Aurora Colorado
United States University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus Aurora Colorado

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Colorado, Denver Children's Hospital Colorado

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (24)

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Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change in Pain as Assessed by Bieri Faces Scale The Bieri faces scale was developed in 1990 for children to self-report their pain levels by selecting a face corresponding to their pain severity. The Bieri faces scale has been validated in children >5 years old. Children are asked to select one of 7 faces ranging from no pain to worst possible pain. Weekly change in pain for 12 weeks
Primary Pain Before Dressing Change as assessed by r-FLACC Burn clinic providers will rate each child's pain before and after dressing changes using the r-FLACC scoring tool. Scores range from 0-2, with higher scores indicating more pain. Weekly change in pain for 12 weeks
Primary Pain After Dressing Change as assessed by r-FLACC Burn clinic providers will rate each child's pain before and after dressing changes using the r-FLACC scoring tool. Scores range from 0-2, with higher scores indicating more pain. Weekly change in pain for 12 weeks
Primary POSAS Scale Score This scale is a validated tool that will be adapted so that parents and providers score the child's wound based on several criteria. The observer/provider will evaluate vascularization, pigmentation, thickness, surface roughness, pliability, and surface area. The patient's parents will score six items: pain, pruritus, color, thickness, relief, and pliability. It is widely used in the burn literature to evaluate and report on the appearance of healed burn scars. Moreover, it routinely used in the burn clinic at CHCO to assess and serially document changes in the appearance of burn scars over time. Weekly change in scar from 3rd week to 12 weeks
Primary Change in Pain as Assessed using Visual Analog Scale The visual analog scale is widely used to assess pain in the burn population. It was developed by Huskisson in 1974 and evaluates pain on a scale of 0 to 10; it has been validated in children >7 years old. Weekly change in pain for 12 weeks
Primary PROMIS Pain Interference Survey The PROMIS pain interference survey (short form) is an eight-question survey developed by the NIH to assess pain control over the past week in children >8 years old. Weekly change in pain interference for 12 weeks
Primary PROMIS Pain Interference Proxy Survey The PROMIS pain interference proxy form (short form) is an eight-question survey developed by the NIH to assess parents' perceptions of their child's pain control over the past week. Weekly change in pain interference for 12 weeks
Primary Pain Diary application (PainScale) This is a free, downloadable application for androids and iPhones. It will be used by patients and/or their parents to document their pain severity, location, and medication use. Each report will be sent to the study coordinator via a HIPAA compliant server. Parents or patients will be asked to document their pain levels and pain medication use postoperatively for the first 7-10 days (until their first clinic appointment). Day 1 through Day 7-10 Post-op
Secondary Infection Presence of absence of infection at the donor site (s) based on odor, rash, deep red appearance or pruritus--these wounds will typically not be cultured. 1 day (study visit) per week up to 12 weeks
Secondary Cost of dressings Overall dressing cost 12 weeks
Secondary Heal time number of clinic visits until the burn provider or plastics PA considers the donor site(s) healed 12 weeks
Secondary re-epithelialization Number of days to re-epithelialization 12 weeks
Secondary Burn Itch Severity as assessed by Itch Man Scale The Itch man scale is validated in patients 6 years or older and uses a Likert scale to quantify the degree of itchiness. A score of 0 is not itchy at all, a score of 4 reflects the most itchy. 12 weeks
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