Literature DB >> 26339534

Challenges in the Treatment of Chronic Wounds.

Robert G Frykberg1, Jaminelli Banks1.   

Abstract

Significance: Chronic wounds include, but are not limited, to diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, and pressure ulcers. They are a challenge to wound care professionals and consume a great deal of healthcare resources around the globe. This review discusses the pathophysiology of complex chronic wounds and the means and modalities currently available to achieve healing in such patients. Recent Advances: Although often difficult to treat, an understanding of the underlying pathophysiology and specific attention toward managing these perturbations can often lead to successful healing. Critical Issues: Overcoming the factors that contribute to delayed healing are key components of a comprehensive approach to wound care and present the primary challenges to the treatment of chronic wounds. When wounds fail to achieve sufficient healing after 4 weeks of standard care, reassessment of underlying pathology and consideration of the need for advanced therapeutic agents should be undertaken. However, selection of an appropriate therapy is often not evidence based. Future Directions: Basic tenets of care need to be routinely followed, and a systematic evaluation of patients and their wounds will also facilitate appropriate care. Underlying pathologies, which result in the failure of these wounds to heal, differ among various types of chronic wounds. A better understanding of the differences between various types of chronic wounds at the molecular and cellular levels should improve our treatment approaches, leading to better healing rates, and facilitate the development of new more effective therapies. More evidence for the efficacy of current and future advanced wound therapies is required for their appropriate use.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 26339534      PMCID: PMC4528992          DOI: 10.1089/wound.2015.0635

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Wound Care (New Rochelle)        ISSN: 2162-1918            Impact factor:   4.730


Robert G. Frykberg, DPM, MPH

Scope and Significance

Chronic lower extremity ulcers are those that do not progress through the healing process in a timely manner and have become a major challenge to healthcare systems worldwide. In the United States alone, these wounds affect an estimated 2.4–4.5 million people.[1,2] Chronic leg and foot ulcers occur in many adults with vascular disease or diabetes and are attributed to chronic venous insufficiency, arterial disease, prolonged pressure, or neuropathy.[2] These ulcers last on average 12 to 13 months, recur in up to 60% to 70% of patients, can lead to loss of function and decreased quality of life, and are a significant cause of morbidity.[2,3] Predominantly a condition of the elderly, chronic wounds are becoming more prevalent and more difficult to treat and are associated with high treatment costs.[4] The care of chronic wounds has become its own specialty, with providers often using advanced therapies, including growth factors, extracellular matrices (ECMs), engineered skin, and negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT).[5] Care for such conditions has been reported to cost 2% to 3% of the healthcare budgets in developed countries.[2,3] Chronic wounds can be classified as vascular ulcers (e.g., venous and arterial ulcers), diabetic ulcers, and pressure ulcers (PUs).[6] Some common features shared by each of these wounds include prolonged or excessive inflammation, persistent infections, formation of drug-resistant microbial biofilms, and the inability of dermal and/or epidermal cells to respond to reparative stimuli.[7-11] In aggregate, these pathophysiologic phenomena result in the failure of these wounds to heal. The underlying pathologies, however, differ among various types of chronic wounds. This review provides a brief overview of the pathophysiology of chronic wound healing and discusses the established tenets and advanced treatment of chronic wounds, with an emphasis on diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). Overcoming the factors that contribute to delayed healing is a part of the comprehensive approach to wound care and presents the primary challenges to the treatment of chronic wounds.

Translational Relevance

This review provides researchers with a comprehensive discussion of the pathophysiology and approaches for the evaluation and treatment of chronic wounds from the perspective of an experienced wound care physician. A better understanding of the challenges physicians face currently with chronic wounds should facilitate the development of new wound care products. This review also demonstrates the lack of available evidence demonstrating efficacy for a majority of existing advanced wound care products. This fact should be taken into consideration by researchers during the development of clinical programs for wound care products.

Clinical Relevance

Understanding and addressing the challenges in the treatment of chronic wounds will lead to a better clinical outcome (faster and more durable wound closure), resulting in improved patient quality of life and reduced healthcare costs. This review provides a current expert opinion and can be used as a guideline for evaluation and appropriate treatment selection for nonhealing wounds.

Discussion

Physiology of wound healing

The physiological process of wound healing is achieved through four temporarily and spatially overlapping phases: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling phases.[12,13] Immediately after injury, hemostasis occurs and is characterized by vasoconstriction and blood clotting, which prevents blood loss and provides the provisional matrix for cell migration. Platelets secrete growth factors and cytokines attract fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and immune cells to initiate the healing process. The subsequent inflammation phase lasts up to 7 days. The predominant cells at work in this phase are phagocytic cells, such as neutrophils and macrophages. Neutrophils release reactive oxygen species (ROS) and proteases that prevent bacterial contamination and cleanse the wound of cellular debris. Blood monocytes arrive at the wound site and differentiate into tissue macrophages. The latter not only remove bacteria and nonviable tissue by phagocytosis but also release various growth factors and cytokines recruiting fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and keratinocytes to repair the damaged blood vessels. As the inflammatory phase subsides accompanied by apoptosis of immune cells, the proliferation phase begins. This phase is primarily characterized by tissue granulation, formation of new blood vessels (angiogenesis), and epithelialization. The last phase occurs once the wound has closed and may last 1–2 years or longer. During this phase, the provisional matrix is remodeled into organized collagen bundles.[14,15]

Pathophysiology of chronic wounds

Chronic wounds are defined as wounds that fail to proceed through the normal phases of wound healing in an orderly and timely manner. Often, chronic wounds stall in the inflammation phase of healing. Despite differences in etiology at the molecular level, chronic wounds share certain common features, including excessive levels of proinflammatory cytokines, proteases, ROS, and senescent cells, as well as the existence of persistent infection, and a deficiency of stem cells that are often also dysfunctional (Fig. 1).

Molecular and cellular deficiencies in chronic wounds (red circles) and factors required to overcome them (green rectangles). Nonhealing ulcers and wounds represent a failure to achieve complete reepithelialization in the appropriate temporal sequence of tissue repair. Such wounds are characterized by excessive inflammation (including elevated levels of proteases, ROS, and inflammatory cytokines), by senescent cell populations with impaired proliferative and secretory capacities, and by defective MSCs. Excessive inflammation leads to degradation of newly synthesized growth factors and ECM. There is a need to restore the proper balance of cytokines, growth factors, and proteases, to recruit functional cells (epithelial cells, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells) to the wound area, and to deliver healthy functional MSCs directly to the wound to compensate for the patient's own dysfunctional stem cells. ECM, extracellular matrix; MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; ROS, reactive oxygen species.

Molecular and cellular deficiencies in chronic wounds (red circles) and factors required to overcome them (green rectangles). Nonhealing ulcers and wounds represent a failure to achieve complete reepithelialization in the appropriate temporal sequence of tissue repair. Such wounds are characterized by excessive inflammation (including elevated levels of proteases, ROS, and inflammatory cytokines), by senescent cell populations with impaired proliferative and secretory capacities, and by defective MSCs. Excessive inflammation leads to degradation of newly synthesized growth factors and ECM. There is a need to restore the proper balance of cytokines, growth factors, and proteases, to recruit functional cells (epithelial cells, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells) to the wound area, and to deliver healthy functional MSCs directly to the wound to compensate for the patient's own dysfunctional stem cells. ECM, extracellular matrix; MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; ROS, reactive oxygen species. Due to repeated tissue injury, microorganisms and platelet-derived factors, such as transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) or ECM fragment molecules, stimulate the constant influx of immune cells; the proinflammatory cytokine cascade therefore becomes amplified and persists for a prolonged time, leading to elevated levels of proteases. In acute wounds, proteases are tightly regulated by their inhibitors. In chronic wounds, protease levels exceed that of their respective inhibitors, leading to destruction of ECM and degradation of growth factors and their receptors. The proteolytic destruction of ECM not only prevents the wound from moving forward into the proliferative phase but also attracts more inflammatory cells, thus amplifying the inflammation cycle.[16] Immune cells produce ROS, which in low concentrations provides defense against microorganisms. In chronic wounds, however, the predominant hypoxic and inflammatory environment increases ROS production, which damages ECM proteins and causes cell damage. This sequence of events leads to an enhanced stimulation of proteases and inflammatory cytokines.[17] It has been suggested in an animal model that application of strong antioxidants reduces ROS to normal levels, which results in the reverse of the chronicity of wounds and improves healing.[18] Furthermore, chronic wounds are characterized by senescent cell populations with impaired proliferative and secretory capacities, rendering them unresponsive to typical wound healing signals.[15] It has been reported that fibroblasts from venous and PUs are senescent and have a diminished ability to proliferate. This diminished proliferative capacity is directly correlated with the failure of a wound to heal.[19-21] Accumulated data also indicate that chronic wounds contain senescent keratinocytes, endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and macrophages.[22-25] The senescent phenotype of cells in chronic wounds is attributed to oxidative stress that leads to DNA damage-related cell cycle arrest or to abnormal metabolic changes in diabetic patients, which results in defects in intracellular biochemical pathways such as the GSK-3β/Fyn/Nrf2 pathway.[24,26] In recent years, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been shown to play an important role in wound healing.[27] These cells can be recruited into the circulation in response to injury. Subsequently, they are found to engraft into the remodeling microvasculature. Nonetheless, it has also been shown that stem cells in animals and patients with diabetes or chronic wounds are both deficient and defective.[27-29] Thus, these patients may require a direct delivery of healthy donor-derived functional MSCs to overcome this deficiency and achieve wound healing.[30] Nonhealing ulcers and wounds represent a failure to achieve complete reepithelialization in the appropriate temporal sequence of tissue repair.[31] Understanding the underlying molecular and physiologic perturbations of nonhealing wounds, one can appreciate the necessity to modify these wounds toward the characteristics of an acute healing wound. The need to restore the proper balance of cytokines, growth factors, proteases, and metabolically competent cells is illustrated in Fig. 1.[15]

Patient and wound assessment

The care for chronic wounds therefore relies upon basic tenets that aim to not only remove or ameliorate the etiologic causes but also to address underlying systemic and metabolic perturbations such as infection or peripheral arterial disease. Proper care of the wound is facilitated initially by employing thorough patient and wound assessment. Factors contributing to the development or recalcitrance of the wounds are then addressed accordingly. Concurrent with the management of associated complications or etiologic factors, wound bed preparation plays a key role in encouraging the proper environment in which tissue repair can take place. Of course, appropriate diagnosis is mandatory to establish the etiology of the nonhealing wound. DFUs, venous leg ulcers (VLUs), PUs, post surgical wounds, and wound dehiscences are the most commonly seen wounds in wound care practice. Atypical wounds such as pyoderma gangrenosum can also be very challenging. Each has its own underlying etiopathogenesis that must be addressed upon initial presentation. Nonetheless, the clinician must be diligent in taking care to rule out the presence of malignancy in the wound either secondarily due to malignant degeneration as in the case of squamous cell carcinoma or as a primary lesion (Fig. 2A). Aside from neoplastic lesions, the basic tenets of wound assessment and care as presented in Table 1 serve as a guide to facilitate the management of most chronic wounds.

(A) Recurrent plantar ulcer not responsive to offloading. Biopsy revealed amelanotic melanoma. The clinician must be diligent in taking care to rule out the presence of malignancy in the wound either secondarily due to malignant degeneration as in the case of squamous cell carcinoma or as a primary lesion. (B) Cellulitis from infected digital wound with associated ischemia. Significant erythema can indicate cellulitis or infection requiring immediate hospitalization or might be an indicator of significant ischemia (dependent rubor). (C) Probe-to-bone test. If the bone is directly appreciated at the base of a wound, osteomyelitis is likely. A positive probe-to-bone test has a high predictive value for underlying osteomyelitis, even in the absence of acute signs of deep infection.

Table 1.

Basic tenets of wound care

Patient assessment
 Medical comorbidities/history
  Diabetes, chronic kidney disease, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, peripheral arterial disease, alcohol, etc.
  Obesity, functional status, smoking
  Medications—steroids, warfarin, antibiotics, etc.
 Laboratory parameters/vital signs
  Glucose, hemoglobin A1c, creatinine, complete blood count, albumin, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, etc.
 Nutrition
 Reliability
Wound assessment
 Wound diagnosis—DFU, VLU, PU, postsurgical, etc.
 Etiology
  Shoes, high plantar pressure, injury
 Depth, extent, area, location, appearance, temp., odor
 Neurological—10 G monofilament, deep tendon reflexes, vibration perception threshold
 Vascular—pulses (ABI, toe blood pressure, transcutaneous oximetry, arteriography prn)
 Infection—probe for depth and abscess, tissue culture PRN
  Classify, determine presence of osteomyelitis
  X-ray (MRI, scans, computed tomography, PRN)
 Structural deformities
  Charcot, hammertoes, bunions, prior amps
Treatment
 Medical management
 Vascular—revascularization (endovascular vs. BPG) restore pulse. Hyperbaric O2. Topical O2.
 Infection—drain abscesses, debride osteomyelitis, antibiotics
 Wound care
  Debridement
  Wound bed preparation
  Offloading/compression
  Therapeutic agents
  Surgery

ABI, ankle–brachial indices; BPG, bypass graft; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PRN, as necessary; PU, pressure ulcer; VLU, venous leg ulcer.

(A) Recurrent plantar ulcer not responsive to offloading. Biopsy revealed amelanotic melanoma. The clinician must be diligent in taking care to rule out the presence of malignancy in the wound either secondarily due to malignant degeneration as in the case of squamous cell carcinoma or as a primary lesion. (B) Cellulitis from infected digital wound with associated ischemia. Significant erythema can indicate cellulitis or infection requiring immediate hospitalization or might be an indicator of significant ischemia (dependent rubor). (C) Probe-to-bone test. If the bone is directly appreciated at the base of a wound, osteomyelitis is likely. A positive probe-to-bone test has a high predictive value for underlying osteomyelitis, even in the absence of acute signs of deep infection. Basic tenets of wound care ABI, ankle–brachial indices; BPG, bypass graft; DFU, diabetic foot ulcer; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PRN, as necessary; PU, pressure ulcer; VLU, venous leg ulcer.

Patient assessment

Patient assessment must start with a thorough patient history to determine medical comorbidities, contributing factors possibly leading to the chronic wound, prior trauma, prior history of wounds, current medications, and allergies. Obviously, the presence of diabetes mellitus with neuropathy will be important to note for those patients presenting with a DFU as will a history of deep venous thrombosis for those presenting with a suspected VLU. The importance of taking a medical history cannot be overemphasized. Laboratory studies at the time of presentation, including hematology, serum chemistries, and nutritional parameters, will also provide useful information to supplement initial impressions.[32] An assessment of the patients' living situation and their likely reliability in following prescribed treatments is important in the actual determination of which therapies should be employed to manage the wound(s).

Wound assessment

Assessment of the wound actually begins during the initial encounter with the patient, whereby his/her general appearance is noted as well as that of the wound itself. Morbid obesity or, conversely, a painfully thin patient body habitus is a clue to nutritional status that will have a bearing on treatment protocols as well as possibly on outcomes. A visual inspection of the wound will immediately identify very important attributes that will guide further evaluation and treatment. Obvious necrosis or gangrene portends a much more serious complexity, while a healthy granular appearance might preclude a wound complicated by significant ischemia. Significant erythema, on the other hand, can indicate cellulitis or infection requiring immediate hospitalization or might be an indicator of significant ischemia (dependent rubor) (Fig. 2B). Nonetheless, an initial visual impression of the wound provides important clues not only to the etiology of the lesion but also to its complexity. Depth, extent (size), location, general appearance, odor, and notation of exudates are all essential components of wound evaluation and need to be recorded at baseline.[33] Probing the wound will determine its depth of penetration and any tracking along tendon sheaths or tissue planes. A positive probe-to-bone (PTB) test has a high predictive value for underlying osteomyelitis even in the absence of acute signs of deep infection (Fig. 2C).[34,35] A neurological evaluation should be performed to assess the presence and extent of neuropathy since this factor not only predisposes a patient to DFUs but is also a major risk factor for diabetes-related lower extremity amputation.[36-38] A vascular examination is important for any type of chronic wound, but assessment of arterial perfusion is especially important for DFU patients since this parameter will drive all subsequent therapies and outcomes. Palpation of pulses commences initially, recognizing that this assessment can be highly variable among different clinicians.[39,40] Medial arterial calcification renders pulse palpation to be difficult even in the presence of adequate perfusion to the foot. Nonetheless, ankle–brachial indices (ABI) should be obtained at baseline for most patients for whom there is any question of a pulse deficit. Despite the falsely elevated ABI levels that medial arterial calcification produces, the American Diabetes Association has recommended that this diagnostic test be performed on diabetic patients over 50 years of age and whenever clinical circumstances (such as in the case of DFU) dictate this evaluation.[39] Regardless, when the ABI is below 0.9, the patient should be considered to have impaired arterial perfusion. To augment ankle–brachial studies, toe blood pressure readings, pulse volume recordings, transcutaneous oxygen measurements, and skin perfusion pressure measurements have been recommended as valid benchmarks for the prediction of wound healing.[41,42] Whenever peripheral arterial disease is suspected or confirmed by the noninvasive tests above, a referral to a vascular surgeon or interventionist is indicated for angiography and revascularization. Limb salvage rates have been reported as high as 80% for ischemic foot ulcers undergoing revascularization.[43-46] Venous ulcers are obviously different from arterial wounds and require a different series of diagnostic testing to confirm superficial or deep venous reflux, perforator incompetence, and chronic (or acute) venous thrombosis. Venous duplex ultrasound, plethysmography, and other venous reflux tests are the mainstays of diagnosis.[47,48] Notwithstanding, mixed arterial and venous disease is always a concern for management that requires a combination of both arterial and venous noninvasive testing.[49] Ascertainment of infection and determination of its severity are also critical for appropriate wound management and classification.[33] As previously mentioned, a positive PTB test is a good indicator of underlying bone infection, especially in the presence of acute signs of infection.[35] When signs of infection at the wound are present, tissue cultures are indicated to guide specific antimicrobial treatment. In contrast, clinically uninfected wounds should not be cultured since such cultures will yield growth of contaminants that need not be treated.[50] Unfortunately, osteomyelitis can exist at the base of a wound without clinical signs of infection. Therefore, plain radiographs are necessary to rule out underlying bone changes or foreign bodies (or gas when clinical infection is present). However, the specificity (75–83%) of plain radiographs for the detection of osteomyelitis is higher than its sensitivity (43–75%); because of this, the use of other imaging methods are often required.[51] Serial plain radiography taken every 2–4 weeks is more useful than a single plain image due to delayed changes associated with infection progression. Serial plain radiography has greater sensitivity and specificity and is recommended when access to advanced imaging is limited.[50] Again, exposure of bone or a positive PTB test should prompt suspicion for bone infection and warrant further diagnostic testing. When X-rays are negative, but suspicion is high for bone infection, advanced imaging, such as nuclear medicine scans, magnetic resonance imaging, or computed tomography, is indicated to confirm the diagnosis and the extent of involvement.[33,50] Important for determining the etiology of foot wounds as well as for long-term management, structural deformities must be identified. Hammertoes, bunions, and especially Charcot deformities are important determinants of DFUs in association with neuropathy; these deformities are sites of increased pressure that must be ameliorated to provide for subsequent healing and prevention of recurrence.[33] Similarly, the etiology of the wounds must be ascertained and thereby removed to successfully administer treatment. Foot ulcers are often the result of shoe pressure, repetitive plantar stress, or injury, while VLUs are obviously the result of increased venous pressure and valvular incompetency. Chronic wounds, following their systematic assessment, should be classified according to one of the published (and preferably validated) classification systems. For DFUs, the Wagner, University of Texas, and PEDIS classification systems each have their place and have been embraced by the wound care community.[52-54] VLUs are classified by the CEAP classification system and PUs by the NPUAP classification schemes.[55,56] Classification can ultimately guide treatment by prompting systematic evaluation of important underlying components and, furthermore, can predict outcomes based on the severity of the disease.[57] Imaging is a valuable method for assessment of the wound healing process. Biopsy of wound tissue is considered the gold standard for measuring tissue morphological changes. The usual analysis involves tissue staining with hematoxylin and eosin, which is examined under light microscopy. However, it is an invasive and time-consuming method. The invasiveness of the method is the primary reason for the development and implementation of noninvasive optical imaging techniques. Currently, there are many different noninvasive methods, including laser Doppler imaging, indocyanine green videoangiography, near-infrared spectroscopy, in vivo capillary microscopy, orthogonal polarization spectral imaging, reflectance-mode confocal microscopy, hyperspectral imaging, optical coherence tomography, laser speckle imaging, photoacoustic microscopy, and others. Although the majority of these methods have more utility in basic research, several noninvasive imaging techniques are already in use for assessment of burns and chronic wounds.[58-62] These published reports show the potential utility of noninvasive imaging as diagnostic and prognostic tools of the future to prevent the incidence of ulceration, diagnose infections, monitor complications and progress of treatment, and predict treatment outcomes.

Basic tenets of treatment of chronic wounds

Managing chronic wounds, although often times challenging, need not be considered a daunting task if basic principles of care are routinely followed. A thorough assessment of the patient and wound will guide subsequent treatment by elucidating underlying areas of concern that need to be specifically addressed. Therefore, a systematic approach to both assessment and treatment should most often lead to favorable outcomes. Due to the frequent complexity of patients and wounds, a multidisciplinary approach to management has been proven highly successful and is widely recommended.[33,63,64] Medical/holistic management of the patient must commence concurrently with wound management. Diabetic patients frequently need improved control of their hyperglycemia, renal insufficiency, nutrition, and other associated medical comorbidities that may adversely affect the healing of their wound(s). Patients with a VLU might often have hemodynamic perturbations requiring improved medical management, while PU patients, often bedridden from intercurrent illness, will have significant nutritional deficits that need to be corrected to optimize tissue repair.[65,66] The vascular examination performed during the wound assessment will have determined the need for necessary interventions.[40] Since many DFUs have a component of vascular insufficiency, referral to a vascular surgeon or vascular interventionist for arterial imaging (angiography, duplex scanning, etc.) and subsequent revascularization need to take place early in the course of treatment. The exact roles of endovascular and open bypass procedures are still evolving, but are primarily determined by arterial anatomy, wound severity, and patient comorbidities.[67,68] The ultimate goal is to restore a palpable pulse in the affected foot. In some limited cases where revascularization has failed or is not feasible, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) might be indicated.[69,70] Topical oxygen therapy, long criticized as having no role in this regard, is emerging again as an adjunctive measure to improve tissue oxygenation.[71,72] In contrast, venous insufficiency must be addressed initially with adequate compression wrapping with or without intermittent pneumatic compression to counteract the detrimental effects of the venous hypertension causing associated VLUs.[49] Where compression therapy is ineffective or for recurrent VLUs due to significant venous disease, surgical intervention on the superficial, deep, and/or incompetent perforators is indicated.[47,49] Again, care must be taken to identify mixed arterial and venous disease in such circumstances since the associated arterial insufficiency complicates customary treatment protocols for venous ulcerations. Infection is similarly an important risk factor for wound healing failure and, in the case of DFUs, for subsequent lower extremity amputation.[73,74] Even excessive bioburden can inhibit normal progression to wound healing.[75] While acutely infected wounds are easily diagnosed, neuropathy can mask the presence of deep infections or abscess. Hence, clinical suspicion must remain high when insensate patients complain of pain or flu-like symptoms. Once diagnosed, infection complicating chronic wounds must be treated aggressively. This includes thorough debridement, surgical drainage of abscesses, debridement of infected bone, and tissue culture-guided antimicrobial therapy. As previously mentioned, clinically noninfected ulcers should not be cultured nor treated with systemic antimicrobial therapy.[50] However, if osteomyelitis is suspected, bone culture, followed by specific antimicrobial therapy (and perhaps surgery), is warranted for this recalcitrant infection.[76] Specific wound care or wound bed preparation commences concurrently with the aforementioned interventions when feasible.[15,75,77] Revascularization, however, often follows control of infection and initiation of wound care procedures. The acronym TIME has been used over the last decade or so to facilitate an organized approach to wound bed preparation and has been summarized nicely by Leaper et al.[78-80] This acronym refers to Tissue assessment and management, Infection/Inflammation management, Moisture imbalance management, and Edge of wound observation and management (Table 2). The TIME principles are an integral, although incomplete, part of this discussion and incorporate the basic tenets of wound care that are critical for managing chronic wounds.
Table 2.

TIME principles of wound bed preparation

Tissue: assessment and debridement of nonviable or foreign material (including host necrotic tissue, adherent dressing material, multiple organism-related biofilm, or slough, exudate, and debris) on the surface of the wound.
Infection/inflammation: assessment of the etiology of each wound, need for topical antiseptic and/or systemic antibiotic use to control infection, and management of inappropriate inflammation unrelated to infection.
Moisture imbalance: assessment of the etiology and management of wound exudate.
Edge of wound: assessment of nonadvancing or undermined wound edges (and state of the surrounding skin).

Revised based on Leaper et al.[78]

TIME principles of wound bed preparation Revised based on Leaper et al.[78] Debridement has long been recognized as a critical component for wound care and has been shown by several investigators to expedite healing.[81,82] Sharp debridement removes nonviable tissue and slough along with bacterial biofilms that prolong the inflammatory response in the chronic wound.[75] In effect, thorough debridement converts the chronic wound from one that is excessively inflamed, as previously described, to more of an acute profile that can jump-start the wound toward a healing trajectory.[15,77] While sharp debridement is considered to be the most efficient way to debride a wound (with scalpel, curette, tissue nippers, etc.), hydrosurgical or ultrasonic debridement can also be used in this regard.[77] The term ulcerectomy has been used to denote complete excision of ulcers down to healthy bleeding tissue, resulting in expedited healing of DFUs.[83] Maintenance debridement with enzymes (collagenase) is frequently used between clinic visits to gently remove slough or to enzymatically debride thick crusts (especially in neuroischemic wounds).[75,84] Biodebridement with maggots has been used for many years in patients not suitable for surgical debridement and has shown some promise in removing slough and necrotic tissue while promoting granulation tissue development.[85,86] Simple hydrogels or hydrocolloid dressings can provide for slow autolytic debridement of slough and dried crusts, especially in ischemic patients or those who cannot undergo surgical debridement. Regardless of the method used, effective debridement of chronic wounds is accepted as an essential component of care throughout the wound healing continuum.[15,33,64,87] Nonetheless, healing can be delayed if debridement is performed too frequently and/or extensively. Development of diagnostic tools, including biomarker analysis and noninvasive imaging, is necessary to better distinguish viable from nonviable tissues in the wound and guide debridement practices.[88] The importance of offloading the chronic wound cannot be overemphasized.[89] In fact, when this component of wound care is neglected, the chances of a successful outcome are extremely low. When one recognizes that most wounds, especially DFUs, have excessive pressure as their proximate cause, it is quite understandable that the high pressures must be ameliorated before healing can take place. For nonplantar wounds caused by tight shoes, it is imperative that the source of offending pressures be eliminated. A number of studies and reviews have confirmed the essential role of offloading in this regard.[90-92] For DFUs, the total contact cast has long been considered as the gold standard for offloading by virtue of its pressure redistribution properties as well as irremovability. Numerous additional offloading modalities have been reported for DFUs, including braces, removable cast walkers, irremovable cast walkers (often referred to as instant total contact casts), half shoes, modified surgical shoes, foot casts, and various felt or foam dressings.[89,90,93] While each device has its own advantages for any given patient, almost any offloading modality is superior to no offloading for the management of DFUs. Along the same lines, compression therapy for chronic VLUs is equally important. Since venous hypertension is at the source of these lesions, hydrostatic pressure into the skin and subcutaneous tissues underlying venous ulcers must be mitigated by external compression.[49] Different modalities, such as the classic Unna's boot, three- or four-layer compression bandages, and short stretch compression bandages, have long been used in this setting.[94] For ulcerated patients with significant venous insufficiency and associated chronic lymphedema, intermittent pneumatic compression pump therapy can also be recommended. While not supplanting the need for directly applied compression wraps, pump therapy will augment their effect and assist in maintaining long-term control of peripheral edema and lymphedema.[49,95] Surgical offloading is a term that (as its name implies) refers to the surgical management of foot deformities causing high pressures resulting in chronic ulcerations.[96-98] While not generally considered a primary treatment for most neuropathic DFUs, those that prove to be recalcitrant to standard wound bed preparation and effective offloading should be considered for surgical internal decompression. Many such procedures have been reported as effective over the last several decades.[99-102] Metatarsal head osteotomies or resections, sesamoidectomies, hammertoe repair, bunionectomies, first metatarsal phalangeal joint arthroplasties, plantar exostectomies, arthrodeses, and partial calcanectomies have all been described for the management of noninfected as well as infected chronic foot ulcers. Soft tissue tendon balancing procedures, such as tenotomies, tendon transfers, and lengthening procedures, including tendo-Achilles lengthening and gastrocnemius-soleus recession, can be done as isolated procedures or in concert with osseous procedures to reduce deformities and high forefoot plantar pressures.[103,104] Several authors have proposed a validated classification scheme for such operations based on the presence or absence of wounds as well as their acuity.[97,105] Elective procedures are done in the absence of neuropathy, while Prophylactic operations are performed in neuropathic individuals to prevent initial ulceration over deformities or to prevent their recurrence. Curative procedures are undertaken to internally decompress chronic wounds, reduce high plantar pressures, or to remove foci of bone infection/osteomyelitis to engender final healing. Emergent operations, often including amputations, must be performed to control acute infection as limb or life-threatening measures. As has been validated, this classification trends toward an increasing need for hospitalization and frequency of amputation in the progression from elective through emergent procedures.[105] Of course, residual postoperative wounds in these patients must be treated with the same tenets of wound care as discussed above until final healing occurs.[96]

Topical wound therapies/dressings

While there are a myriad of topical therapies/antimicrobials and dressings available to the clinician, very few have prospective data to support their effectiveness in promoting wound repair. Nonetheless, many therapies can indeed be useful, despite reliance on anecdotal experience. Hence, clinicians tend to use what they are accustomed to or what seems to be effective based on personal experience. Topically applied agents for wounds run the gamut from sterile saline or hydrogel to povidone–iodine solutions, cadexomer iodine, hypochlorous acid, honey, and collagenase. One topical antimicrobial agent, superoxidized solution, has recently been formally studied for efficacy in healing DFUs and was found to be effective in this regard.[106] Similarly, the inexhaustible availability of dressings can make selection of the appropriate wound covering somewhat daunting. While standard cotton gauze dressings have long been considered standard of care (even in clinical trials), many other primary and secondary dressings are commercially available. Highly absorbent and moisture-retaining foam dressings, acrylics, alginates, hydrofibers, hydrocolloids, honey alginates, oxidized regenerated cellulose, micronized collagen, and many others can be considered as circumstances warrant. Many of the aforementioned products also are available with silver for control of bacterial overburden. While the use of silver-containing products is widespread, misuse of this antibacterial element for prolonged periods is also common. While its primary use is for the reduction of bacterial colonization, there are little data to support its efficacy as a wound healing agent.[107,108] It cannot be emphasized enough that standard dressings and topical therapies never supplant the need for debridement, effective offloading, and appropriate management of infection and ischemia.

Advanced therapies

All currently published guidelines and consensus reviews on the management of chronic DFUs, VLUs, and PUs support the belief that all such wounds should initially be treated with standard wound care principles as have been discussed.[33,49,56,64,109] In most cases, these basic tenets of wound care should be carried out before consideration of the use of more advanced therapies. Most wound care protocols now advocate the use of such standard measures for an initial period of 4 weeks, after which an assessment of wound area reduction should be made. While the 1999 American Diabetes Association publication was one of the first consensus documents on DFU assessment and treatment, it only mentioned that wounds failing to heal by 4 weeks were associated with worse outcomes, including amputation.[110] In 2003, however, Sheehan et al. published the often quoted article supporting the ability of the 4-week healing rate to predict complete healing by 12 weeks.[111] Using data from another large, multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT), it was determined that the midpoint (median) percent wound area reduction from baseline at 4 weeks between those that healed and those that remained unhealed at 12 weeks was 53%.[112] Those who exceeded this midpoint healed in 58% of cases by 12 weeks. In contrast, those that did not achieve 53% wound area reduction by 4 weeks only healed in 9% of cases (p<0.001). Even more striking, the mean 4-week percent change in ulcer area was 82% in healers versus 25% in the nonhealing group regardless of the treatment arm. Subsequently, the 4-week 50% wound area reduction has been widely adopted and confirmed as a robust indicator for predicting healing at 3 months.[33,38,64,87,109,113-115] Consistent with this premise, wounds failing to achieve a 50% area reduction at this time point need to be reassessed and subsequently considered for advanced therapies in the absence of underlying disease or nonadherence to prescribed basic treatment.[33,64] Figure 3 illustrates a fairly common algorithm for DFU treatment incorporating these principles. Figure 4 similarly illustrates an algorithm for VLU treatment.

Simplified algorithm for diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) treatment.

Simplified algorithm for venous leg ulcer (VLU) treatment. ABI, ankle–brachial indices.

Simplified algorithm for diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) treatment. Simplified algorithm for venous leg ulcer (VLU) treatment. ABI, ankle–brachial indices. Once it is determined that the patient might benefit from an advanced therapeutic agent, there are a number of options currently available.[64,116-118] While there have been several key RCTs published on advanced wound care agents for chronic wounds, most such products do not have the benefit of high-level evidence or even nonrandomized prospective studies to attest to their efficacy. Advanced wound therapies can best be discussed by broadly categorizing them according to their specific technologies or engineering, tissue types, cell types, or protein content (i.e., growth factors). Even this scheme will not capture the myriad products, proteins, and molecules that have undergone trials and failed to demonstrate superiority over standard of care treatment. While not exhaustive, Table 3 provides a listing of the more common wound care technologies currently in use in the United States and abroad.
Table 3.

Wound care technologies

Negative pressure wound therapy
 Standard electrically powered—VAC®
 Mechanically powered—SNaP®
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy
 Topical oxygen therapy
Biophysical
 Electrical stimulation, diathermy, pulsed electromagnetic fields
 Pulsed radiofrequency energy
 Low-frequency noncontact ultrasound—MIST®
 Extracorporeal shock wave therapy–DermaPACE®
Growth factors
 Becaplermin—platelet-derived growth factor—Regranex®
 Fibroblast growth factor (Japan)
 Epidermal growth factor (Cuba)
 Platelet-rich plasma
Acellular matrix tissues
 Xenograft dermis
  Primatrix®—bovine neonatal dermis
  Integra®—bovine collagen
  Matriderm®—bovine dermis
 Xenograft acellular matrices
  Oasis®—small intestine submucosa
  Matristem®— porcine urinary bladder matrix
  Ovine forestomach—Endoform®
  Equine pericardium
 Human dermis
  Graftjacket®
  D-cell®
  DermACELL®
  Theraskin®
 Human pericardium
 Placental tissues
  Amniotic tissues/amniotic fluid
  Umbilical cord
  Dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane (dHACM)—Epifix®
Bioengineered allogeneic cellular therapies
 Bilayered skin equivalent—Apligraf®
 Dermal replacement therapy—Dermagraft®
Stem cell therapies
 Autogenous—bone marrow-derived stem cells
 Allogeneic—amniotic matrix with mesenchymal stem cells—Grafix®
Miscellaneous
 Hyalomatrix® (Hyaluronan)
Wound care technologies

Negative pressure wound therapy

Since its introduction in the mid 1990s, negative pressure therapy has assumed a major role in the management of traumatic, acute, and chronic wounds, as well as for stabilizing skin grafts, flaps, and surgical incisions.[119-123] Since the early studies of Morykwas et al. and Argenta and Morykwas that demonstrated the numerous attributes of NPWT, a very large body of evidence has been published supporting the clinical efficacy of this very important biophysical modality.[121,124-129] Clinical trials have been conducted in the ensuing years that have proven the superiority of NPWT over standard therapy for managing open amputation wounds, DFUs, VLUs, and other wounds.[130-132] As an adjunct to standard chronic wound care, NPWT very efficiently manages wound drainage and can provide expedited granulation tissue development, wound area contraction/reduction, preparation for delayed closure or grafting, or primary healing.[133,134] NPWT is also quite useful as a bolster to enhance the incorporation of skin grafts onto recipient wound beds.[135] Application techniques are important, however, since inappropriate placement of tubing can potentially cause skin pressure lesions. Therefore, a bridging method that provides for suction tubing placement away from plantar surfaces has become an important application technique. More recently, these electrically powered devices have added the ability to instill saline or other antimicrobial agents to assist in the cleansing of the wounds concurrent with providing the aforementioned benefits of NPWT.[128,136-138] A mechanically powered, ultralight, and portable NPWT device has also been introduced in recent years.[135,139,140] Two articles comparing this device with the traditional electrically powered device in a prospective RCT have shown equivalent DFU healing outcomes with faster application times and a high degree of patient satisfaction.[141,142] Clinicians have also combined NPWT with other advanced therapies such as acellular and cellular matrices.[143] Such multimodal therapies can be administered concurrently or sequentially as wound characteristics change to provide the optimum therapy for any given wound.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy

HBOT has been advocated as being beneficial for a wide variety of chronic wounds for over two decades.[144-150] While there are numerous retrospective and prospective studies, case series, cohort studies, and several trials indicating the efficacy of HBOT for the treatment of DFUs and VLUs, the general quality of these studies is not robust since inclusion criteria and outcomes are highly variable.[69,144,145,150-156] While the recent Cochrane review in 2012 indicated significant short-term improvement for healing DFUs over controls at 6 weeks (relative risk [RR] 5.20; p=0.02), this benefit was not evident at 1 year or longer.[157] While there was a suggestion that HBOT may decrease the major amputation rate in DFU patients, pooled analysis of the data did not yield a significant estimate for this association (RR 0.36, 95% confidence interval 0.11 to 1.18, p=0.08). The 2010 RCT by Londahl et al. reported favorable outcomes at 1 year for HBOT in those patients with Wagner grade 2, 3, or 4 DFUs failing prior standard interventions for >3 months (52% vs. 29%, p=0.03).[69] Unfortunately, the heterogeneity of the patients and time to reported outcomes (9 months or 1 year) make comparisons with other DFU trials difficult. A more recent review of HBOT in a large observational cohort study by Margolis found that the use of HBOT neither improved the likelihood that a wound would heal nor prevented amputation in patients with adequate lower limb arterial perfusion.[158] This review and the aforementioned Cochrane review both called for a reevaluation of HBOT with rigorously designed adequately powered trials to assess efficacy in healing chronic wounds. Since the very poorly conducted 14-day study by Leslie et al. in 1988, the use of topical wound oxygen for DFUs and VLUs has been considered as highly controversial, especially by advocates of HBOT.[71] The lack of a formal study in this regard has been offset by several reviews, case series, and experimental studies on the effect of topically administered oxygen at the wound surface that seem to indicate a benefit in promoting wound repair.[154,159-169] While several RCTs with different devices have been ongoing, there have been no publications to date comparing 12-week healing rates with those of standard care.

Biophysical modalities

Electrical stimulation has been the most studied biophysical device for healing chronic wounds to date, primarily utilized by physical therapists and physiatrists.[170-173] An abundance of studies advocates the beneficial healing effect of electrical stimulation at various modes and frequencies for a variety of chronic wounds.[174-177] Other nonthermal forms of electromagnetic energy have also been used for wound healing, including pulsed radiofrequency energy (PRFE), pulsed shortwave diathermy, and pulsed electromagnetic fields.[173,178,179] One in vitro study of PRFE effects on cultured dermal fibroblasts and keratinocytes found this electromagnetic field to upregulate expression of a variety of genes involved in modulating the inflammatory stage of wound healing.[180] In general, by interacting with endogenous bioelectric currents, electromagnetic fields indirectly upregulate the production of nitric oxide and multiple growth factors, resulting in cellular mobilization, angiogenesis, and expedited wound repair.[173,176] Ultrasound, most frequently used for diagnostic and musculoskeletal therapy purposes, has also assumed a role in wound management. Several lower frequency devices are currently available for debridement that use the delivery of sound waves to generate cavitation at the wound bed.[173,181] Wounds with thick fibrinous slough and necrosis can thereby be very aggressively debrided with low-frequency ultrasound (LFU) devices, although trials to show improved healing rates have not been conclusive.[181-183] Noncontact LFU using a saline droplet carrier to the wound surface has been proposed as another LFU device that can improve healing rates of chronic ulcers, including those complicated by ischemia.[170,184-188] While this noncontact LFU modality can assist with wound bed preparation, it cannot aggressively debride wounds as well as the aforementioned units. Several retrospective observational studies and one low quality RCT suggested improvements in healing rates over standard of care comparators, but confirmatory prospective studies have not been forthcoming.[184-186,188] Extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) has been used for a number of years for a variety of musculoskeletal conditions and has recently been adapted for the treatment of cutaneous wounds. ESWT is defined as a series of high-energy acoustic pulses delivered to tissues by electrohydraulic, electromagnetic, and piezoelectric sources.[189] The pressure pulses generated promote a cascade of cytokine and growth factor upregulation leading to enhanced neovascularization, anti-inflammatory response, and tissue regeneration.[190,191] Several recent reviews and one study comparing ESWT with HBOT on DFU healing support its potential role in expediting wound repair.[189-191] Nonetheless, RCTs are still required to evaluate the clinical efficacy of this modality in healing chronic wounds of different etiologies.

Biological and bioengineered therapies

Concurrent with the explosive growth of negative pressure therapies and HBOT for the management of chronic wounds in the last two decades, there has been an enormous amount of research and interest in advanced biological therapies. In this regard, biological therapies refer to tissue-based treatments (acellular and cellular), autologous platelet-rich plasma (PRP), as well as recombinant human growth factor therapies. While the latter can be considered as a category unto themselves due to the enormous amount of preclinical research on cytokine and growth factor-mediated wound repair, there are currently only several such therapies commercially available to clinicians—recombinant human platelet-derived growth factor (rhPDGF), fibroblast growth factor (rhFGF), and epidermal growth factor (rhEGF). Numerous other growth factors have been isolated and investigated, such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), keratinocyte growth factor-2, TGF-β, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, but these currently are not approved for use in wound care.[192]

Platelet-rich plasma and growth factors

The clinical interest in growth factor therapies over the last 25 years actually stemmed from the early work of Knighton et al. on autologous PRP and the cascade of growth factors released from activated platelets during the centrifugation of whole blood.[193-195] Several small trials and retrospective reviews have affirmed the potential efficacy of topically applied, activated, autologous platelet supernatants for expedited healing of chronic lower extremity wounds.[196-199] After recognizing the potential benefit of topically applied PDGF to chronic wounds, becaplermin gel (rhPDGF) was studied in the setting of chronic neuropathic DFUs and became the first commercially available advanced therapy for the management of these difficult wounds (and the only growth factor approved for use in the United States).[200-202] In the 20-week phase III clinical trial by Wieman leading to its approval, topically applied rhPDGF gel was found to significantly increase the incidence of complete wound closure by 43% and decrease the time to healing by 32% over placebo-controlled standard wound care.[203] The efficacy of the single topically applied growth factor was corroborated as being beneficial to the healing of chronic nonischemic foot ulcers when combined with good standard wound care in several other studies pooling data from multiple sources.[200,202,204] rhEGF is perhaps the best studied growth factor for cutaneous ulcers and wounds, but is not available in the United States.[205-212] Applied as a topical cream, or more commonly, by intralesional injections, EGF has been found also to expedite the healing of a variety of types of cutaneous wounds. Several small trials have been published from Asia and Cuba attesting to the healing benefits of EGF compared with controls.[207-209,213] However, the heterogeneity of wounds, applications, patient management protocols, and outcomes has not lead to clinical trials in the United States nor to widespread global adoption of this therapy. FGF has been studied primarily in Asia for a variety of chronic wounds, including DFUs, VLUs, and PUs, and is approved in Japan for this use.[214-218] FGF, considered a potent angiogenic growth factor, also has an isoform (FGF-10) commonly known as keratinocyte growth factor-2 or repifermin.[192,217] This agent has been studied in the United States for chronic VLUs as a topical spray. Repifermin was shown to accelerate wound healing with significantly more patients achieving 75% wound closure with repifermin than with placebo after 12 weeks. The treatment effect appeared more marked for a subgroup of patients with initial wound areas ≤15 cm2 and wound ages of ≤18 months.[217] Unfortunately, there were no significant differences between the study and control groups for the primary outcome (healing at 12 weeks), likely due to methodological issues in the study protocol. Neither repifermin nor FGF has been approved in the United States for wound management.

Acellular therapies

The most common types of advanced biological therapies for chronic wounds can generally be classified as acellular therapies—those dermal, amniotic, or collagen-based tissues (human or animal) that have been decellularized during their processing. Often referred to as acellular and/or ECMs, these biological products serve as substrates into which cells can migrate and initiate angiogenesis, thereby promoting granulation tissue development and tissue regeneration.[116] Once considered only as inert structural collagen tissue providing a scaffold for cellular ingrowth, ECMs are now known to play an active part in tissue regeneration through a dynamic interaction with growth factors and host cells.[219-221] ECMs contain not only structural collagen but also glycosaminoglycans (including hyaluronan), proteoglycans, and glycoproteins—all essential components to replace the defective ECM of injured tissues.[222,223] Currently available nonhuman ECM products with clinical data to support their efficacy include porcine-derived small intestinal submucosa, porcine urinary bladder matrix, bovine dermis, equine pericardium, and sheep (ovine) bladder.[224-233] Another matrix dressing (Hyalomatrix®; Anika Therapeutics, Inc., Bedford, MA) comprising primarily hyaluronan, one of the main constituents of ECM, has also been studied in Europe as a dermal substitute for use in burns, VLUs, and DFUs.[234-237] Integra® bilayer wound matrix (Integra LifeSciences, Plainsboro, NJ) is a dermal regeneration template in this category (bovine collagen, glycosaminoglycans, and silicone layer) that has primarily been used in burns for a number of years, but is being more frequently used in lower extremity chronic wounds and foot ulcers.[238,239] Although there are few published prospective studies to support their efficacy, most of these products are commercially available in the United States at relatively low cost and are approved for use in multiple chronic wound types. Human dermal allografts have become increasingly popular in recent years for augmenting tissue regeneration in chronic lower extremity wounds and have been formally studied in DFUs and VLUs. These are defined by the Food and Drug Administration as human cellular and tissue-based products. The allografts are harvested from screened donors, and each is prepared with proprietary processes to decellularize and cryopreserve the dermis while maintaining the natural structure of the collagen and ECM.[240-245] As with the aforementioned ECM products, the dermal matrices serve as scaffolds for cellular repopulation and angiogenesis, with varying degrees of incorporation into the recipient wound bed.[246,247] One of these cryopreserved dermal allografts, referred to as a human skin allograft, claims that both the extracellular and cellular components are preserved during the minimal processing.[242,243] Two of the available dermal regenerative matrices have successfully undergone small RCTs (Graftjacket®; KCI, San Antonio, TX and TheraSkin®; Soluble Systems, Newport News, VA), while a third is currently undergoing a clinical trial for DFUs (dCell®; Tissue Regenix, San Antonio, TX).[240,243] Available data suggest that acellular dermal matrices, in addition to basic wound care principles, may provide an effective technique for tissue regeneration in deep and cutaneous extremity wounds.[221,246] Amniotic membranes (AMs) and umbilical cord tissues have been used for many years for corneal ulcers and were actually the earliest reported biomaterials used for wound repair. In recent years, there has been a greatly expanded interest in these tissues for chronic wounds, likely due to the wide availability of placental tissues after cesarean deliveries. Due to their rich cellular content in the native state, AMs contain a number of cytokines and growth factors bound to the ECM after decellularization and preparation that remain available to augment angiogenesis and tissue repair when implanted into chronic wounds.[248-251] AMs are available in the cryopreserved state or as dehydrated products for direct implantation.[250,252,253] Several products are also available in a micronized formulation that can be applied topically or hydrated for injection into wounds or other inflamed tissues (tendonitis, plantar fasciitis, etc.) to augment healing.[254] Amniotic fluid with granulized amniotic matrix is also available for the management of chronic wounds.[255] While several retrospective and prospective studies have supported the benefit of amniotic matrix products for chronic wound repair, the only published randomized and comparative studies to date have utilized the dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane (dHACM).[255-262] In the initial small RCT of just 25 DFU patients in a single center, Zelen et al. reported a 92% healing rate after 6 weeks in the dHACM (Epifix®; Mimedix Group, Marietta, GA) group compared with 8% in the standard of care group (p<0.001).[261] In a crossover study of unhealed patients in the control arm of the RCT, 91% healed by 12 weeks with biweekly dHCAM application.[259] Subsequent studies ascertained that weekly applications of this allograft provided more rapid healing of DFUs than biweekly application and that healing frequency with the amnion/chorion product was significantly higher than patients assigned to either a bilayered skin substitute or to standard of care treatment in another comparative trial.[260,262] Many of the aforementioned studies, however, were sponsored by a single company with a single product and the same investigative group. Since a number of other AM products are now commercially available, further studies should be forthcoming to determine if there is a distinction between different amniotic matrices pertaining to efficacy in wound repair.

Bioengineered cellular therapies

For more than a decade, two allogeneic bioengineered skin replacement therapies utilizing neonatal expanded cells have been available in the United States market to address chronic wounds. Both products underwent formal, controlled clinical trials before their approval for use. The first cellular product (Apligraf®; Organogenesis, Canton, MA) is a bilayered construct consisting of a bovine collagen matrix seeded with living human neonatal fibroblasts and a neonatal keratinocyte neoepidermis. It is approved for both chronic VLUs as well as DFUs. This living skin equivalent not only addresses the deficient ECM of chronic wounds by adding a collagen matrix but also introduces immune-privileged living cells that proliferate and actively synthesize growth factors, cytokines, and ECM products.[263-265] In the pivotal, multicenter, 12-week clinical trial, patients randomized to the Apligraf group achieved complete healing in 56% of cases compared with 38% in the control group (p=0.0042).[266] With an average of four applications, the bilayered skin equivalent also healed the chronic DFUs significantly faster than those patients treated with standard care (65 vs. 90 days, p=0.0026). Other subsequent investigations found similar efficacy of this bioengineered product for healing chronic diabetic foot wounds as well as VLUs.[267,268] Dermagraft® (Organogenesis, Canton, MA) is a human fibroblast-derived dermal substitute (HFDS) comprising a cryopreserved, absorbable, three-dimensional polyglactin mesh substrate seeded with living neonatal dermal fibroblasts.[269] Similar to the bilayered skin replacement, these cells secrete a host of growth factors, cytokines, matrix proteins, and glycosaminoglycans that induce tissue regeneration through the development of granulation tissue and ingrowth of host fibroblasts and keratinocytes.[270,271] This dermal substitute was proven effective in healing chronic DFUs in the pivotal trial by Marston et al. in 2003.[272] In this multicenter clinical trial, those patients assigned to the HFDS group healed significantly faster after 12 weeks compared with the standard wound care group (30% vs. 18.3%, p=0.023). Despite the ostensibly low overall healing rate, the study group achieved a 64% increased healing compared with the standard care group. This was a greater margin of effect than reported in any previous trial. Despite the failure to achieve superiority in its primary outcome of complete healing in a large VLU trial, significant differences in complete healing were achieved for a subgroup of ulcers ≤12 months in duration (p=0.029).[273] Other authors have reported success with the dermal substitute in a variety of lower extremity wounds, often used in concert with other wound healing modalities.[274-277] A recent study investigated the incidence of amputations and bone resections within the two arms of the DFU pivotal trial and found a decreased incidence of these complications in the HFDS group, likely related to a lower incidence of infection and faster healing in the investigational treatment group.[278]

Stem cell therapies

Perhaps the most recent advancements for wound care therapies are that of stem cell therapies, primarily bone marrow derived, and most recently, placental-derived stem cells. Both sources are considered as adult stem cells, and the cell lineage of interest are the MSCs. Briefly, MSCs are multipotent progenitor cells that can directly differentiate into mesenchymal tissues, such as bone, tendon, and cartilage. Their ability to affect cutaneous repair, however, is through an indirect paracrine function (trophic activity), whereby they synthesize essential growth factors and cytokines that affect cell migration, proliferation, and metabolic activity of host cells and tissues.[30,279,280] In this manner, MSCs play an active role in the inflammatory, proliferative, and remodeling phases of wound repair.[281] Interestingly, MSCs can respond to the host environment by upregulating anti-inflammatory cytokines in the presence of inflammation and respond to hypoxic environments by upregulating the release of VEGF to induce angiogenesis. During the remodeling phase, MSCs produce growth factors, such as TGF-β3, to limit excessive scarring as well as modulate the balance between matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases while regulating collagen deposition. Important for allogeneic implantation, MSCs are characterized as being immune privileged since they lack cell surface antigens that would typically engender a foreign body reaction.[281] Bone marrow-derived stem cells (BMSCs) have been of interest for some time now and studies have indicated their ability to augment repair or regeneration of numerous tissues, including cardiac, bone, cartilage, blood vessels, and skin.[30,282,283] Although much interest has focused on orthopedic and critical limb ischemia applications, BMSCs are increasingly being studied for use in enhancing chronic wound and cutaneous repair.[118,284-291] Several articles and clinical studies have specifically focused on DFU management.[292-294] One of the earlier studies by Yamaguchi et al. took a novel approach by decorticating exposed bone at the base of the ulcer to locally release bone marrow cells directly into the wound.[290] This was followed several weeks later by application of autologous epidermal grafts, resulting in significantly improved healing compared with standard wound care (p<0.0001). In another small case series by Rogers et al., BMSCs were harvested from the ipsilateral distal tibial metaphysis, and the aspirate was applied topically or by peripheral injection under the debrided wounds with good results.[287] Large randomized studies have not yet been published comparing wounds treated with BMSCs with standard care. Another issue for consideration in such trials will be standardizing methods for obtaining and processing the marrow aspirates, as well as potential complications associated with this surgical procedure. Placental tissues—including the umbilical cord, the amnion, and the chorion—are a rich source of MSCs and are readily available without the ethical concerns of embryonic stem cells.[281,292] Furthermore, the MSCs in these tissues do not suffer from the age-related effects nor decreased cell counts as found in MSCs harvested from adult patients with comorbid diseases.[279,293,295] Placental-derived MSCs show minimal differences from those obtained from different sites, and yet retain all of the metabolic, paracrine, and immunomodulative properties previously described while maintaining their immune-privileged status.[281] Traditionally, placental or amniotic tissues used for wound repair were prepared from fresh cesarean section donors. One small modern study investigated the efficacy of fresh AM on the healing of chronic VLUs and found a positive effect on pain reduction and a significant clinical response (20% completely healed) within the 3-month follow-up period.[257] Overcoming the difficulties of fresh transplantation, a new cryopreserved AM product (Grafix®; Osiris Therapeutics, Inc., Columbia, MD) has become commercially available in recent years. This human MSC-rich wound matrix contains viable cells, including fibroblasts and epithelial cells, in addition to MSCs and a natural ECM.[281] In a single-center retrospective study of 67 chronic lower extremity wounds, including VLUs and DFUs, this viable wound matrix in association with good standard wound care was found to close 76.1% of wounds at 12 weeks with a mean time to healing of 5.8 weeks.[296] A subsequent 12-week RCT comparing the efficacy of Grafix to standard of care for the healing of DFUs was published in 2014.[297] In this pivotal trial where the primary outcome was complete wound healing at 12 weeks, those patients assigned to weekly applications of the viable human matrix healed significantly more DFUs than those in the control group (62% vs. 21%, p=0.0001). The median time to healing was also significantly faster in the study group (42 vs. 69.5 days, p=0.019). Of particular interest, those unhealed patients in the control group were allowed to crossover to receive up to 12 weeks of viable stem cell matrix therapy. The probability for closure in these patients was 67.8% with a mean time to closure of 42 days.[297] The results of this study represent a margin of effect between active and control groups of 191%, higher than any other published study to date. • Chronic wounds require a systematic approach, including both patient and wound assessment, no matter what the underlying etiology of the wound. • The care of chronic wounds relies upon basic tenets that aim to remove or ameliorate the etiological causes and to address systemic and metabolic perturbations. • Basic tenets include vascular examination, followed by appropriate interventions, management of wound-related infection, wound debridement, and offloading. • Wound bed preparation plays a key role in providing the proper environment in which tissue repair can take place. • In addition to offloading with the purpose of eliminating excessive pressure, the term surgical offloading has been introduced, meaning the surgical management of foot deformities underlying chronic ulcerations. • Most wound care protocols advocate the use of advanced therapies after 4 weeks for nonhealed wounds. • There are a number of advanced therapies for chronic wounds. However, most do not have a high level of evidence or even nonrandomized prospective studies assessing their efficacy. Selection of advanced therapies should be based on the evidence available.

Summary

Complex wounds represent a major challenge for the clinician and wound care specialist. Despite all the recent advances in wound care therapies and our understanding of the pathophysiology underlying chronic wounds, nothing can supplant the need for adhering to the basic tenets of wound care: thorough assessment with medical and nutritional optimization, debridement (including surgery), offloading (or compression), management of ischemia, management of infection, and appropriate wound bed preparation. Following these principles and established wound care guidelines should often lead to satisfactory outcomes. In addition, the rational use of advanced wound care therapies is encouraged when wounds do not respond sufficiently to good standard care after 4 weeks or sooner as circumstances dictate. In most cases, selection of advanced therapies should be based on the evidence available to help facilitate their most appropriate use.
  284 in total

1.  Wound bed preparation of difficult wounds: an evolution of the principles of TIME.

Authors:  Claudio Ligresti; Filippo Bo
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 3.315

Review 2.  A systematic review of topical negative pressure therapy for acute and chronic wounds.

Authors:  D T Ubbink; S J Westerbos; E A Nelson; H Vermeulen
Journal:  Br J Surg       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 6.939

3.  The clinical effectiveness in wound healing with extracellular matrix derived from porcine urinary bladder matrix: a case series on severe chronic wounds.

Authors:  Howard Kimmel; Michael Rahn; Thomas W Gilbert
Journal:  J Am Col Certif Wound Spec       Date:  2010-11-30

4.  An evidence-based algorithm for treating venous leg ulcers utilizing the cochrane database of systematic reviews.

Authors:  Howard M Kimmel; Angela L Robin
Journal:  Wounds       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 1.546

5.  Effect of extensive debridement and treatment on the healing of diabetic foot ulcers. Diabetic Ulcer Study Group.

Authors:  D L Steed; D Donohoe; M W Webster; L Lindsley
Journal:  J Am Coll Surg       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 6.113

6.  Apligraf in the treatment of neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers.

Authors:  Michael Edmonds
Journal:  Int J Low Extrem Wounds       Date:  2009-02-03       Impact factor: 2.057

7.  A randomized, controlled trial of Promogran (a collagen/oxidized regenerated cellulose dressing) vs standard treatment in the management of diabetic foot ulcers.

Authors:  Aristidis Veves; Peter Sheehan; Hau T Pham
Journal:  Arch Surg       Date:  2002-07

8.  Practical guidelines on the management and prevention of the diabetic foot: based upon the International Consensus on the Diabetic Foot (2007) Prepared by the International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot.

Authors:  J Apelqvist; K Bakker; W H van Houtum; N C Schaper
Journal:  Diabetes Metab Res Rev       Date:  2008 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.876

9.  Probing to bone in infected pedal ulcers. A clinical sign of underlying osteomyelitis in diabetic patients.

Authors:  M L Grayson; G W Gibbons; K Balogh; E Levin; A W Karchmer
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1995-03-01       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Granulation response and partial wound closure predict healing in clinical trials on advanced diabetes foot ulcers treated with recombinant human epidermal growth factor.

Authors:  Carmen M Valenzuela-Silva; Ángela D Tuero-Iglesias; Elizeth García-Iglesias; Odalys González-Díaz; Amaurys Del Río-Martín; Isis Belkis Yera Alos; José I Fernández-Montequín; Pedro A López-Saura
Journal:  Diabetes Care       Date:  2012-09-10       Impact factor: 19.112

View more
  281 in total

1.  Early induction of NRF2 antioxidant pathway by RHBDF2 mediates rapid cutaneous wound healing.

Authors:  Vishnu Hosur; Lisa M Burzenski; Timothy M Stearns; Michelle L Farley; John P Sundberg; Michael V Wiles; Leonard D Shultz
Journal:  Exp Mol Pathol       Date:  2017-03-06       Impact factor: 3.362

2.  Systemic translation of locally infiltrated epidermal growth factor in diabetic lower extremity wounds.

Authors:  Ariana García-Ojalvo; Jorge Berlanga Acosta; Alain Figueroa-Martínez; Mónica Béquet-Romero; Yssel Mendoza-Marí; Maday Fernández-Mayola; Amirelia Fabelo-Martínez; Gerardo Guillén-Nieto
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2019-08-19       Impact factor: 3.315

3.  Local Immunomodulation Using an Adhesive Hydrogel Loaded with miRNA-Laden Nanoparticles Promotes Wound Healing.

Authors:  Bahram Saleh; Harkiranpreet Kaur Dhaliwal; Roberto Portillo-Lara; Ehsan Shirzaei Sani; Reza Abdi; Mansoor M Amiji; Nasim Annabi
Journal:  Small       Date:  2019-07-22       Impact factor: 13.281

Review 4.  Applied Bioengineering in Tissue Reconstruction, Replacement, and Regeneration.

Authors:  Juan M Colazo; Brian C Evans; Angel F Farinas; Salam Al-Kassis; Craig L Duvall; Wesley P Thayer
Journal:  Tissue Eng Part B Rev       Date:  2019-08       Impact factor: 6.389

5.  [Choosing wisely recommendations in angiology].

Authors:  O J Müller; R Sternitzky
Journal:  Internist (Berl)       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 0.743

6.  A combined approach for the development of novel sutures with antibacterial and regenerative properties: the role of silver and silk sericin functionalization.

Authors:  Anna Lucia Gallo; Mauro Pollini; Federica Paladini
Journal:  J Mater Sci Mater Med       Date:  2018-08-09       Impact factor: 3.896

7.  Nanotechnology in Wound Care: One Step Closer to the Clinic.

Authors:  Masoud Mozafari
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2018-08-16       Impact factor: 11.454

8.  Optimized Scratch Assay for In Vitro Testing of Cell Migration with an Automated Optical Camera.

Authors:  Michelle Vang Mouritzen; Håvard Jenssen
Journal:  J Vis Exp       Date:  2018-08-08       Impact factor: 1.355

Review 9.  Mesenchymal Stem Cell/Multipotent Stromal Cell Augmentation of Wound Healing: Lessons from the Physiology of Matrix and Hypoxia Support.

Authors:  Kyle Sylakowski; Andrew Bradshaw; Alan Wells
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2020-04-12       Impact factor: 4.307

10.  Development of a Peptide Derived from Platelet-Derived Growth Factor (PDGF-BB) into a Potential Drug Candidate for the Treatment of Wounds.

Authors:  Milena Deptuła; Przemysław Karpowicz; Anna Wardowska; Piotr Sass; Paweł Sosnowski; Alina Mieczkowska; Natalia Filipowicz; Maria Dzierżyńska; Justyna Sawicka; Ewa Nowicka; Paulina Langa; Adriana Schumacher; Mirosława Cichorek; Jacek Zieliński; Karolina Kondej; Franciszek Kasprzykowski; Artur Czupryn; Łukasz Janus; Piotr Mucha; Piotr Skowron; Arkadiusz Piotrowski; Paweł Sachadyn; Sylwia Rodziewicz-Motowidło; Michał Pikuła
Journal:  Adv Wound Care (New Rochelle)       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 4.730

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