Wound Healing Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment of Subcutaneous Abdominal Wound Healing Impairment After Surgery Without Fascial Dehiscence by Vacuum Assisted Closureâ„¢(SAWHI-V.A.C.® Study) Versus Standard Conventional Wound Therapy
This clinical study is performed in several German, Dutch and Belgian hospitals to evaluate
the efficacy of Vacuum Assisted Closure® (V.A.C.®) for the treatment of postsurgical
abdominal wound healing impairments after surgery. Therefore the underlying layer of fibrous
tissue that permeates the internal organs must be intact.
Main outcome measure is the time until complete wound closure that sustained for a minimum of
14 days. Furthermore the therapy options will be examined regarding several other clinical,
safety, patient reported and economic parameters.
Patients will be assigned equally and by chance to both treatment groups. Study participants
as well as the attending doctors and nurses will be informed about the assignment to the
respective treatment arm.
The primary outcome measure and some of the secondary parameters like reappearance of the
wound and the development of the wound size over time, examined within an active study
treatment time of 42 days, will be photographed and analysed under the use of a central
computer system. The central analysing personal will not be informed about patient details or
therapy allocation.
Patients with at first closed belly wounds with wound healing disorder in the postoperative
course after surgery without an opening of the underlying layer of fibrous tissue are
eligible to be included in the trial if the diagnosis of a wound healing impairment in the
postoperative course is manifested as a wound with spontaneous dehiscence, a wound that
requires an active reopening of the suture by the treating physician or a wound that cannot
be closed by primary intention and requires further treatment to achieve permanent closure.
Study participants will be selected and enrolled within clinical surgical departments which
provide the respective personal, structural and scientific background for the conduction of
the trial project.
Trial therapy will be started in-hospital and may be continued in ambulatory care. It is very
important to examine the therapy options also in the ambulant care setting thus study
participants with good health who are able to continue the specific wound treatment in
ambulant should be transferred to the ambulant service as soon as possible.
The Institute for Research in Operative Medicine as part of the Private University of Witten
/Herdecke is planning and performing a clinical trial project to evaluate the efficacy of
Vacuum Assisted Closure® (V.A.C.®) Therapy for the treatment of postsurgical abdominal wound
healing impairments after surgery without fascial dehiscence. The clinical trial project is
fully financed by Kinetic Concepts Incorporated (KCI). The V.A.C.® Therapy devices that will
be used in this study include the ActiV.A.C.® Therapy System, InfoV.A.C.® Therapy System, and
V.A.C. Freedom® Therapy System. All V.A.C.® Therapy devices to be utilized in this study bear
the CE mark and will be operated within normal conditions of use and according to
manufacturer's specifications.
Background of the clinical trial project is the decision of the Joint Federal Committee of
Germany (Gemeinsamer Bundesausschusses (G-BA)) that Vacuum assisted closure therapy is
inadmissible to be a standard benefit of health insurance companies in Germany.
This decision is based on systematic review & meta-analysis of existing trials performed by
Institute for Quality and Economic Efficiency in the Healthcare System (Institut für Qualität
und Wirtschaftlichkeit im Gesundheitswesen (IQWiG)) which showed an insufficient state of
evidence regarding the efficacy of negative pressure wound therapy for the treatment of acute
and chronic wounds.
This study project compares Vacuum Assisted Closure® and standard conventional wound therapy
in the treatment of acute abdominal wounds after surgery without fascial dehiscence and will
be conducted in abdominal surgical hospital departments with the required structural,
manpower, and scientific qualifications. Patients will be stratified according to hospital
and wound size. Trial therapy will be started in-hospital and may be continued in ambulatory
care.
The study is designed as a multinational, multicentre, prospective randomized controlled,
adaptive design, clinical superiority trial, with blinded photographic analysis of the
primary endpoint.
The primary objective is to compare the clinical, safety, and economic outcomes of V.A.C.®
Therapy and SCWT in postsurgical abdominal wound healing impairments without fascial
dehiscence.
The primary outcome to be observed in this study is time to complete abdominal wound closure
where closure is observed at or before day 42 and is confirmed to have been sustained for a
period of at least 14 consecutive days. This study design also will allow detailed
description of specific covariates to determine their effect on response variables (healing).
This study's hypothesis is that the use of the V.A.C.® Therapy System, when compared to SCWT
in the management of post-surgical abdominal wound healing impairments with intact fascia,
will result in a decrease in the time to achieve complete wound closure with confirmation
after subsequent 14 days.
Using V.A.C.® Therapy is an effective and safe treatment option for hospitals as well as for
outpatient care for treatment of subcutaneous abdominal wounds with wound healing impairment
in the postoperative course.
Randomisation to treatment arms will be performed at a 1:1 ratio. Randomisation will be
performed via a centralized system with an Internet-based tool. To address issues of
blinding, wound photo documentation will be obtained during the trial and confirmation of
wound closure will be assessed via blinded photographic analysis, which will serve as the
method of primary endpoint analysis.
Primary closed abdominal wounds with wound healing disorder in the postoperative course after
surgical intervention without fascial dehiscence are eligible to be included in the trial if
the diagnosis of a wound healing impairment in the postoperative course is manifested as a
wound with spontaneous dehiscence, a wound that requires an active reopening of the suture by
the treating physician or a wound that cannot be closed by primary intention and requires
further treatment to achieve permanent closure.
During active recruitment phase, the pre-trial estimates indicate approximately 600 patients
will be required to yield the target of 552 evaluable participants. Using an adaptive design
study sample-size calculations will be re-estimated upon planed interim analysis of study
data of 250 patients. Patients will be enrolled from approximately 25 centres in Germany, the
United Kingdom, Belgium and the Netherlands.
The evaluation of the primary Endpoint defined as time (number of days) to achieve complete
wound closure verified by photo documentation and blinded, computer-based wound quality
assessment as well as wound closure confirmation after 14 consecutive days and secondary
endpoints including clinical endpoints like recurrences, safety endpoints, patient reported
outcome parameters and economic-based outcome measures will provide data regarding efficacy
and efficiency of NPWT therapy for the treatment of acute post-surgical abdominal wound
healing impairment in hospital as well as in the ambulant setting.
The results of the study will be provided to make a contribution to the final decision of the
Joint Federal Committee about NPWT to be a standard benefit of health insurance companies in
Germany for inpatient and / or outpatient care.
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