Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

In this research, the patients with chronic wounds accompanied by pain were treated by injecting freshly manufactured tissue permeable hyaluronan fragment HA35 into the tissue under the heath skin immediately surrounding the chronic wounds.


Clinical Trial Description

Chronic wounds are wounds or ulcers that do not heal properly and are generally classified as venous, arterial, diabetic, traumatic, and pressure chronic wound. Persistent chronic inflammation is a hallmark for chronic wound or trauma and is also often associated with inflammatory and neuropathic pain. Injections of high molecular weight hyaluronan HA into joint cavity have been used for many years in treatment of joint pain as well as associated inflammation. Still, due to the high viscosity and poor tissue permeability of high molecular weight HA, it is unsuitable for treating chronic wound or trauma pain and the associated inflammation. In this study, the investigators found that hyaluronidase PH20 could cleave high molecular weight hyaluronan into 35kDa low molecular weight hyaluronan fragment HA35. The freshly-made hyaluronan fragment HA35 had great tissue permeability compared with high molecular HA. Our previous clinical studies (http://www.clinicaltrials.gov) have shown freshly-made hyaluronan fragment HA35 effectively treating shoulder, neck and back pain as well as the severe pain associated with shingles. In this study, the tissue-permeable 35kDa hyaluronan fragment HA35 was freshly manufactured by mixing hyaluronidase PH20 injectable solution and high-molecular-weight hyaluronan HA injectable solution. The therapeutic effect of the tissue-permeable hyaluronan fragment HA35 for treatment of pain associated chronic wounds was studied in a single-arm off-label used, before and after treatment comparison, clinical study similar to others. Both recombinant human hyaluronidase PH20 (Hylenex, Halozyme Inc) and bovine testis-derived hyaluronidase PH20 (H31022111) are able to cleave high molecule weight hyaluronan into 35 kDa hyaluronan fragments HA35 (L20200708MP07707, Ministry of Health, Mongolia). This clinical study uses 35kDa low molecular weight hyaluronan fragment HA35 which was freshly manufactured by mixing bovine testis-derived hyaluronidase PH20 injection (H31022111) with high molecular weight hyaluronan HA injection (H20174089) for 20 minutesat at room temperature. In this study, 20 hospitalized patients with chronic wounds accompanied by pain were treated with the freshly manufactured 35 kDa low molecular weight hyaluronan fragment HA35. There were 8 patients with diabetic chronic wounds, 4 patients with chronic venous wounds, 2 patients with chronic arterial wounds, 6 patients with traumatic and chronic pressure wounds. Among these patients, there are 12 males and 8 females, having average age of 55±10 years. The creteria for the chronic wound in this study were the wound that has not been healed more than 3 months. All the chronic wounds were associated with significantly pain. All the wounds were clinically presented by surface darkenes and purulent secretions on the wounds, and darkness, redness, swelling and dryness and broken surface of the skin surrounding the wounds. This study is an open-label clinical study in which no information is withheld from participantes and investigators. In this study, the therapeutic effect was studied by comparison of those of before and after treatment in a single-arm study. The pain associated with the wounds and degree of healing of the wounds including the size of fresh granulation area on the wound, the degree of darkness or redness, dryness and broken surface of the skin surrounding the wound, and the size of the wound were observed and recorded. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05764226
Study type Interventional
Source Nakhia Impex LLC
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date July 6, 2020
Completion date February 8, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT01442103 - Clinical Utility of a New Silver Gel for Use on Chronic Wounds N/A
Completed NCT00425178 - FGF-1 for Topical Administration for the Treatment of Diabetic or Venous Stasis Ulcers Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT04411264 - Evaluation of the Effect of Virtual Reality on Pain in the Management of Chronic Wounds. N/A
Recruiting NCT03882983 - Stromal Vascular Fraction From Lipoaspirate to Treatment of Chronic Non-healing Wound Phase 1
Completed NCT04903366 - Absorption and Safety of Topical Timolol to Treat Chronic Wounds
Not yet recruiting NCT05491291 - Chronic Wound Care of Lower Limb in M@diCICAT Center at CHU de Martinique N/A
Completed NCT01572376 - Autologous Bone Marrow Stem Cells in Pressure Ulcer Treatment Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06306716 - Single Center Clinical Study on New Negative Pressure Wound Therapy Dressing in the Management of Chronic & Acute Wounds
Completed NCT02053337 - A RCT to Compare Performance of Two Foam Dressings on Patient Well-being Related Endpoints. N/A
Completed NCT02519166 - Characterisation of Biofilm of the Chronic Wounds N/A
Completed NCT04320628 - Randomized Double-Blind Controlled Clinical Trial N/A
Completed NCT04342767 - The Effectiveness of a Mechanical Debridement Instrument in Reducing Bioburden in Chronic Wounds
Not yet recruiting NCT05493943 - P.E.M.F. Therapy of Chronic Wounds N/A
Completed NCT01881815 - Swab Sample Collection for the Detection of Bacterial Proteases N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06424561 - The Influence of Systematic Psychological Intervention on Patients About VSD Drainage Surgery N/A
Completed NCT03678636 - WOUNDCHEK Bacterial Status Benefits Evaluation N/A
Terminated NCT03198169 - A Study to Investigate Two Atteris Antimicrobial Products on Chronic Wound Healing. N/A
Withdrawn NCT04172363 - Clinical Relevance of the Antimicrobial Resistance Testing in the Treatment of Chronic Wounds With Antiseptics Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT05187676 - Clinical Evaluation of an Innovative Non-contact Optical Device for Skin Oxygenation Imaging N/A
Recruiting NCT00535548 - Hematopoietic Stem Cell Therapy in Chronic Wounds Using a Pressure Sore Model Phase 1