| Literature DB >> 31376297 |
William A Marston1, John C Lantis2, Stephanie C Wu3, Aksone Nouvong4, Tommy D Lee5, Nicholas D McCoy5, Herbert B Slade5,6, Scheffer C Tseng5.
Abstract
Clinical trials of potential new therapies for diabetic foot ulcers rarely enroll patients whose wounds extend to muscle, fascia, or bone with clinical and radiographic evidence of underlying osteomyelitis. An open-label, multicenter trial of cryopreserved human umbilical cord (TTAX01) was undertaken in 32 subjects presenting with such complex wounds with a mean duration of 6.1 ± 9.0 (range: 0.2-47.1) months and wound area at screening of 3.8 ± 2.9 (range: 1.0-9.6) cm2 . Aggressive surgical debridement at baseline resulted in 17 minor amputations and an increase in mean wound area to 7.4 ± 5.8 (range: 1.1-28.6) cm2 . All subjects were placed on systemic antibiotics for at least 6 weeks in conjunction with baseline application of TTAX01. Repeat applications were made at no less than 4-week intervals over the 16-week trial. Initial closure occurred in 18 of 32 (56%) wounds, with 16 (50%) of these having confirmed closure in 16 weeks with a median of one-product application. Cases with biopsy confirmed osteomyelitis (n = 20) showed initial closure in 12 (60%) wounds and confirmed closure in 10 (50%) wounds. Four of the five ulcers presenting as recurrences experienced confirmed closure. Mean overall time to healing was 12.8 ± 4.3 weeks. Mean wound area reduction from baseline was 91% for all wounds. Of the 16 wounds without confirmed closure during the 16-week treatment period, five (31.3%) achieved 99-100% wound area reduction by their final visit. The product was well tolerated. Two minor amputations occurred during the study period due to recurrent or persistent osteomyelitis; however, there were no major amputations.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31376297 PMCID: PMC6900178 DOI: 10.1111/wrr.12754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wound Repair Regen ISSN: 1067-1927 Impact factor: 3.617
Figure 1CONSORT flow diagram.
Demographics and baseline characteristics
| TTAX01 treatment ( | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 57.7 ± 10.2 (41.0–73.0) |
| Gender | |
| Female | 1 (3%) |
| Male | 31 (97%) |
| Race | |
| Alaskan Native/American Indian | 1 (3%) |
| Black/African American | 8 (25%) |
| White/Caucasian | 22 (69%) |
| Other | 1 (3%) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Hispanic/Latino | 8 (25%) |
| Not Hispanic/Latino | 24 (75%) |
| Occurrence | |
| First occurrence | 27 (84%) |
| Reoccurrence | 5 (16%) |
| Osteomyelitis | |
| Positive tissue culture | 22 (689%) |
| Confirmed bone infection | 20 (63%) |
| Wound area (cm2) | 7.4 ± 5.8 (1.1–28.6) |
| Wound duration (months) | 6.1 ± 9.0 (0.2–47.1) |
| Wound location | |
| Heel | 5 (16%) |
| Lateral surface | 3 (9%) |
| Medial surface | 2 (6%) |
| Plantar surface | 18 (56%) |
| Toes (interdigital) | 4 (13%) |
Values are reported as mean ± SD (min–max) or number (%).
Figure 2Individual subjects wound area by visit week. CONF1 and CONF2 are confirmation of healing visits. EOS is the end of study visit.
Figure 3Percentage change in wound area from baseline. Plots of the average change all subjects, and for those whose wounds were above or below the average baseline wound area of 7.4 cm2.
Figure 4Representative case of successful wound closure with one application of TTAX01. Subject presented with a 9.0 cm2 wound at screening, which slightly increased to 9.1 cm2 following initial debridement (A). The wound achieved complete closure by visit 12 using one application of TTAX01 (B).
Figure 5Representative case of failed wound closure by visit 16. Subject presented with a 7.2 cm2 wound at screening. Following initial debridement (A), wound measured 8.2 cm2. The subject received a second application of TTAX01 at study visit 11 due to stalled healing. By final visit 16 (B), wound showed an 89% reduction from baseline area and measured 0.9 cm2.