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Clinical Trial Summary

Diabetic foot ulcers (DFU) are one of the most common reasons for hospitalization of diabetic patients and frequently results in amputation of lower limbs. Of the one million people who undergo non-traumatic leg amputations annually worldwide, 75% are performed on people who have type 2 diabetes (T2DM). The risk of death at 10 years for a diabetic with DFU is twice as high as the risk for a patient without a DFU. The rate of amputation in patients with DFU is 38.4%4. Infection is a common (>50%) complication of DFU. Emerging evidence underscores the significant risk that biofilm infection poses to the non-healing DFU. Biofilms are estimated to account for 60% of chronic wound infections. In the biofilm form, bacteria are in a dormant metabolic state. Thus, standard clinical techniques like the colony forming unit (CFU) assay to detect infection may not detect biofilm infection. Thus, biofilm infection may be viewed as a silent maleficent threat in wound care.


Clinical Trial Description

In the current standard of care (SoC), wound closure is defined (FDA) by wound area re-epithelialization without drainage. The investigators' pre-clinical large animal work demonstrates that wounds with a history of biofilm infection may meet above criteria but the repaired wound-site skin is deficient in barrier function. This has led to the concept of functional wound closure wherein the current clinical definition of wound closure is supplemented with a functional parameter - restoration of skin barrier function as measured by low trans-epidermal water loss (TEWL). This study rests on DFU-patient based findings from a NIDDK-DIACOMP funded pilot study (Sen/Gurtner) showing that closed DFU with deficient barrier function are more likely to recur. Biofilm infection as assessed through scanning electron microscopy and wheat germ aggluttin assay performed on debrided tissue causes faulty re-epithelialization, compromising skin barrier function at the closed wound site. Such defects are caused by biofilm-inducible miRs which silence junctional proteins necessary for skin barrier function. The IRB protocol associated with this study, rests on our novel patient-based observation that in wound-edge tissue catenin delta1/p120 catenin (CTNND1) is suppressed as measured through immunohistochemistry. CTNND1 is an essential regulator of E-cadherin stability which is regarded as a master organizer in epithelial phenotype and plays a critical role in maintaining the barrier integrity of skin. Our prior study identified miR-9 is a biofilm induced microRNA that targets adherens junction protein E-cadherin. We propose that miR-9 can target CTNND1 (Aim 1). The validation of miR targeting will be performed quantitative real time PCR, Western blot analyses, Argonaute 2 pull down assay and on bead assay. Thus, this proposal, fully based on the study of DFU patients, seeks to conduct a fully powered clinical study testing whether DFU with a history of biofilm infection closes with deficient barrier function (Aim 2). Aim 3 tests whether such functionally deficient wound closure, manifested as high TEWL, is associated with greater wound recurrence. Per FDA, the significance of association studies is heightened by support of a well-founded biological rationale provided by mechanistic studies22. This proposal rests on such mechanisms that have been reported by us in pre-clinical large animal studies18-20. The primary parent study will address molecular mechanisms implicated in biofilm-induced loss of skin epithelial barrier integrity in DFU patients. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05172089
Study type Observational
Source University of Pittsburgh
Contact Bryce Hockman, CCRP
Phone 317 278 2715
Email bbhockma@iu.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date April 2, 2024
Completion date June 27, 2029

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