Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05217160 |
Other study ID # |
KeraStat |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 4
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
May 11, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
May 31, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2022 |
Source |
The Metis Foundation |
Contact |
Victoria Diaz, RN |
Phone |
210-916-5760 |
Email |
Diaz[@]metisfoundationusa.org |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study is intended to provide information from subjects who currently have painful,
chronically open wounds and assess the pain reduction capacity of KeraStat® Gel with
Morphine. In gathering data from subjects who have baseline pain from their chronically open
wounds, the investigators can then evaluate the capacity of KeraStat® Gel plus Morphine in
reducing the subjects daily pain levels, pain associated with dressing changes, and pain
medication consumption.
Description:
Chronic wounds pose a serious challenge to wound care professionals, as open and non-healing
ulcers are often painful and difficult to treat. Patients are less compliant because of their
pain and also run the risk of increased pain medication exposure in treating these wounds. A
great deal of healthcare resources are dedicated to the treatment of non-healing open wounds.
KeraStat® Gel offers a novel method for the topical delivery of Morphine to manage pain
during the treatment of healing these problematic wounds.
Proof of concept work showed that a single treatment application of opioid-loaded keratin
hydrogels produced extended analgesia that lasted up to two days in both sensitized and
non-sensitized models of pain in rodents. This work then moved the proposed product into a
porcine large animal study that showed topical morphine did not delay wound healing or
re-epithelization and did not impact dermal thickness or Transforming Growth Factor Beta 1
(TGF1). Additionally, pharmacokinetics assessments showed that topical delivery of morphine
to a burn wound resulted in no detectable morphine in animal serum.
KeraStat® Gel is a sterile, non-implantable, water-based gelatinous (hydrogel) wound dressing
intended to act as a protective covering in the management of a variety of partial thickness
dermal wounds. Keratin is a structural, filamentous protein that, when hydrated, forms a
hydrogel that provides coverage and maintains a moist environment for injured skin, similar
to collagen and other extracellular matrix molecules used in existing products. Therefore,
KeraStat® Gel is expected to behave in an equivalent manner to conventional biopolymer wound
dressings. ISO 10993 biocompatibility studies and performance testing, both in vitro and in
vivo, indicated that KeraStat® Gel is safe and biocompatible. Additionally, two clinical
studies support the assertion that the product is non-sensitizing, non-irritating, and does
not produce a humoral response. The current study is designed to provide pilot data to inform
a power calculation to determine whether KeraStat® Gel plus Morphine reduces pain associated
with dressing changes which may secondarily reduce daily pain and pain medication
consumption.
This study is intended to evaluate the efficacy of KeraStat® Gel with Morphine in treating
and/or minimizing the pain associated with chronic open wounds and subsequently replace or
reduce the need for systemic analgesia.
Long-term impacts include improving tolerance to dressing changes resulting in better
adherence to the treatment of painful open wounds, as well as giving providers an alternative
to systemic narcotics which are dangerous, have many negative side effects, and are highly
addictive. Data from this project will also support further studies in evaluating and
assessing patients who have painful wounds and their chronic management.