Literature DB >> 29906322

Dressings and topical agents for treating venous leg ulcers.

Gill Norman1, Maggie J Westby, Amber D Rithalia, Nikki Stubbs, Marta O Soares, Jo C Dumville.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Venous leg ulcers are open skin wounds on the lower leg which can be slow to heal, and are both painful and costly. The point prevalence of open venous leg ulcers in the UK is about 3 cases per 10,000 people, and many people experience recurrent episodes of prolonged ulceration. First-line treatment for venous leg ulcers is compression therapy, but a wide range of dressings and topical treatments are also used. This diversity of treatments makes evidence-based decision-making challenging, and a clear and current overview of all the evidence is required. This review is a network meta-analysis (NMA) which assesses the probability of complete ulcer healing associated with alternative dressings and topical agents.
OBJECTIVES: To assess the effects of (1) dressings and (2) topical agents for healing venous leg ulcers in any care setting and to rank treatments in order of effectiveness, with assessment of uncertainty and evidence quality. SEARCH
METHODS: In March 2017 we searched the Cochrane Wounds Specialised Register; the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL); Ovid MEDLINE; Ovid MEDLINE (In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations); Ovid Embase and EBSCO CINAHL Plus. We also scanned reference lists of relevant included studies as well as reviews, meta-analyses, guidelines and health technology reports to identify additional studies. There were no restrictions with respect to language, date of publication or study setting. We updated this search in March 2018; as a result several studies are awaiting classification. SELECTION CRITERIA: We included published or unpublished randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that enrolled adults with venous leg ulcers and compared the effects of at least one of the following interventions with any other intervention in the treatment of venous leg ulcers: any dressing, or any topical agent applied directly to an open venous leg ulcer and left in situ. We excluded from this review dressings attached to external devices such as negative pressure wound therapies, skin grafts, growth factors and other biological agents, larval therapy and treatments such as laser, heat or ultrasound. Studies were required to report complete wound healing to be eligible. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Two review authors independently performed study selection, 'Risk of bias' assessment and data extraction. We conducted this NMA using frequentist meta-regression methods for the efficacy outcome; the probability of complete healing. We assumed that treatment effects were similar within dressings classes (e.g. hydrocolloid, foam). We present estimates of effect with their 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for individual treatments focusing on comparisons with widely used dressing classes, and we report ranking probabilities for each intervention (probability of being the best, second best, etc treatment). We assessed the certainty (quality) of the body of evidence using GRADE for each network comparison and for the network as whole. MAIN
RESULTS: We included 78 RCTs (7014 participants) in this review. Of these, 59 studies (5156 participants, 25 different interventions) were included in the NMA; resulting in 40 direct contrasts which informed 300 mixed-treatment contrasts.The evidence for the network as a whole was of low certainty. This judgement was based on the sparsity of the network leading to imprecision and the general high risk of bias in the included studies. Sensitivity analyses also demonstrated instability in key aspects of the network and results are reported for the extended sensitivity analysis. Evidence for individual contrasts was mainly judged to be low or very low certainty.The uncertainty was perpetuated when the results were considered by ranking the treatments in terms of the probability that they were the most effective for ulcer healing, with many treatments having similar, low, probabilities of being the best treatment. The two most highly-ranked treatments both had more than 50% probability of being the best (sucralfate and silver dressings). However, the data for sucralfate was from one small study, which means that this finding should be interpreted with caution. When exploring the data for silver and sucralfate compared with widely-used dressing classes, there was some evidence that silver dressings may increase the probability of venous leg ulcer healing, compared with nonadherent dressings: RR 2.43, 95% CI 1.58 to 3.74 (moderate-certainty evidence in the context of a low-certainty network). For all other combinations of these five interventions it was unclear whether the intervention increased the probability of healing; in each case this was low- or very low-certainty evidence as a consequence of one or more of imprecision, risk of bias and inconsistency. AUTHORS'
CONCLUSIONS: More research is needed to determine whether particular dressings or topical agents improve the probability of healing of venous leg ulcers. However, the NMA is uninformative regarding which interventions might best be included in a large trial, largely because of the low certainty of the whole network and of individual comparisons.The results of this NMA focus exclusively on complete healing; whilst this is of key importance to people living with venous leg ulcers, clinicians may wish to take into account other patient-important outcomes and factors such as patient preference and cost.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29906322      PMCID: PMC6513558          DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD012583.pub2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev        ISSN: 1361-6137


  303 in total

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7.  Risk factors for delayed healing and recurrence of chronic venous leg ulcers--an analysis of 1324 legs.

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8.  Prospective, multicenter study of managing lower extremity venous ulcers.

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9.  Effect of amelogenin extracellular matrix protein and compression on hard-to-heal venous leg ulcers.

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Journal:  J Wound Care       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 2.072

10.  Use of a fibrous dressing in exuding leg ulcers.

Authors:  S H Armstrong; C V Ruckley
Journal:  J Wound Care       Date:  1997-07       Impact factor: 2.066

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  24 in total

1.  [Venous ulcus cruris-Surgical treatment].

Authors:  Benjamin Juntermanns; Knut Kröger; Peter Waldhausen; Gabor Gäbel
Journal:  Hautarzt       Date:  2022-06       Impact factor: 0.751

Review 2.  Hydrogel dressings for venous leg ulcers.

Authors:  Cibele Td Ribeiro; Fernando Al Dias; Guilherme Af Fregonezi
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2022-08-05

3.  Interventions for maintenance of surgically induced remission in Crohn's disease: a network meta-analysis.

Authors:  Zipporah Iheozor-Ejiofor; Morris Gordon; Andrew Clegg; Suzanne C Freeman; Teuta Gjuladin-Hellon; John K MacDonald; Anthony K Akobeng
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2019-09-12

Review 4.  Wound Care for Venous Ulceration.

Authors:  Sarah E Schroeppel DeBacker; Julie C Bulman; Jeffrey L Weinstein
Journal:  Semin Intervent Radiol       Date:  2021-06-03       Impact factor: 1.780

5.  "Wounds Home Alone"-Why and How Venous Leg Ulcer Patients Self-Treat Their Ulcer: A Qualitative Content Study.

Authors:  Mirna Žulec; Danica Rotar-Pavlič; Zrinka Puharić; Ana Žulec
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-02-15       Impact factor: 3.390

Review 6.  Antimicrobial stewardship of antiseptics that are pertinent to wounds: the need for a united approach.

Authors:  Jean-Yves Maillard; Günter Kampf; Rose Cooper
Journal:  JAC Antimicrob Resist       Date:  2021-03-25

7.  International study to develop the WOUND-Q patient-reported outcome measure for all types of chronic wounds.

Authors:  Anne F Klassen; Emiel L W G van Haren; Tert C van Alphen; Stefan Cano; Karen M Cross; Anne-Margreet van Dishoeck; Kenneth L Fan; Maarten Michael Hoogbergen; Dennis Orgill; Lotte Poulsen; Jens Ahm Sørensen; Lee Squitieri; Elena Tsangaris; Dalibor Vasilic; Andrea L Pusic
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 3.315

8.  Compression bandages or stockings versus no compression for treating venous leg ulcers.

Authors:  Chunhu Shi; Jo C Dumville; Nicky Cullum; Emma Connaughton; Gill Norman
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2021-07-26

Review 9.  Dressings and topical agents for treating venous leg ulcers.

Authors:  Gill Norman; Maggie J Westby; Amber D Rithalia; Nikki Stubbs; Marta O Soares; Jo C Dumville
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2018-06-15

10.  Negative pressure wound therapy compared with standard moist wound care on diabetic foot ulcers in real-life clinical practice: results of the German DiaFu-RCT.

Authors:  Dörthe Seidel; Martin Storck; Holger Lawall; Gernold Wozniak; Peter Mauckner; Dirk Hochlenert; Walter Wetzel-Roth; Klemens Sondern; Matthias Hahn; Gerhard Rothenaicher; Thomas Krönert; Karl Zink; Edmund Neugebauer
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-03-24       Impact factor: 2.692

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