Chronic Leg Ulcer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Inhaled 50% Equimolar Nitrous Oxide/Oxygen Gas Premix (Kalinox®) as Compared to Topically Administered 5% Eutectic Mixture of Lidocaine/Prilocaine (EMLA®) in Chronic Leg Ulcer Debridement
Adequate analgesia in serial chronic leg ulcer debridement can be difficult to achieve. A common analgesia method is the topical administration of local anesthetics directly onto the wound. However, complete wound debridement is often hampered by insufficient analgesia leading to interruption of the actual debridement and fragmentation of treatment into more frequent serial debridement sessions. Alternatively, the inhalation of an nitrous oxide/oxygen (N2O/O2) gas premix could be used for analgesia. In this study, the investigators have compared the analgesic method of an eutectic mixture of topically administered lidocaine/prilocaine cream (EMLA®) with the inhalation of an equimolar 50% N2O/50% O2 gas premix (Kalinox®) in serial leg ulcer debridement.
Study design: Prospective, controlled, single-center, cross-over design study. The study
protocol was approved by the local ethical committee.
Study setting/participants: The study is performed in a highly specialized secondary care
vein center. Patients with chronic foot and leg ulcer disease that are scheduled for
repetitive ulcer debridement are eligible for the study and included into the study provided
that written informed consent is obtained and no exclusion criteria are present.
Debridement procedure: For debridement, disposable sterile scalpel blades, ring curettes,
and sterilized reusable scissors and forceps are used. The intended sharp mechanical
debridement is proceeded as long as it is tolerated by the patient or terminated as planned.
It will immediately be discontinued if the patient asks for it due to intolerable pain or
discomfort.
Analgesia methods: For analgesia during debridement, either a topically administered
eutectic mixture of 5% lidocaine/prilocaine (EMLA®) or an inhaled premix of 50% nitrous
oxide/50% oxygen (Kalinox®) are used. The 5% lidocaine/prilocaine cream is administered as a
thick layer directly onto the wound with a scoop and the wound is sealed with a polyurethane
foil. After 30 minutes of exposure time, the foil is removed and debridement is started
immediately. For analgesia with the inhaled 50% nitrous oxide/50% oxygen premix, the patient
is asked to hold an inhalation rebreather mask with on-demand-valve tightly placed onto the
face after being instructed on how to inhale the gas premix. After 3 minutes of exposure
time to the gas premix, debridement is started immediately. Gas inhalation is sustained
until final wound dressing is applied. During the entire procedure with each analgesia
method, vital signs such as non-invasive blood pressure, heart rate and peripheral oxygen
saturation (SpO2) are be recorded.
Allocation of the analgesia regimen: After study enrollment, patients are consecutively
numbered starting at one. Even numbered patients have the first debridement done with
topical administration of lidocaine/prilocaine cream, followed by inhaled nitrous
oxide/oxygen premix for the second debridement, and again followed in an alternating way by
both tested analgesia methods up to a maximum of 4 interventions. Uneven numbered patients
receive inhaled nitrous oxide/oxygen premix first, followed by topical lidocaine/prilocaine
cream. After 4 debridement in total with 2 sets of each analgesia method, the study period
for each single patient will be secluded. A maximum of 4 data sets per patient will be
brought to data analysis.
Outcome measures: Primary outcome is the change of pain perception from baseline (1 minute
before debridement) to time point of maximum debridement/wound profoundness (up to 10
minutes after start of debridement) as measured by the visual analogue scale (VAS).
Secondary outcomes are change of pain perception from time point of maximum
debridement/wound profoundness to 5 minutes after debridement as measured by the visual
analogue scale (VAS), duration of treatment session, duration of debridement, achievement of
treatment goal (completion), subjective general perception of analgesia quality during
debridement (patient comfort). Baseline characteristics are gender, age, ulcer etiology,
time passed between initial ulcer diagnosis and first debridement, wound emergence in terms
of suspected trigger for ulcer development, and wound size.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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