| Literature DB >> 32733969 |
Elahe Mahdipour1, Amirhossein Sahebkar2,3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recombinant proteins and growth factors are emerging therapies for diabetic foot ulcers. Despite several clinical reports, there has been no comprehensive and systematic assessment of the totality of clinical evidence on the efficacy and safety of recombinant proteins and growth factors in diabetic foot ulcers. We tried to address this gap through an updated systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733969 PMCID: PMC7378608 DOI: 10.1155/2020/6320514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Figure 1Study flow diagram for identification of eligible studies to review.
Characteristics of RCTs evaluated PDGF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Study | Intervention | Type of control | Size and the old of the wound | # of patients | Antibiotics application during the treatment period (if needed) | Baseline HbA1C | Types of wound and grade of wound | Dressing type | Offloading | Treatment duration | Follow up period posttherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Phase III RCT | Becaplermin® gel (Regranex) 100 and 30 | Placebo | >2cm2 for a period of at least 8 weeks | 382 | Y | 6.5-7.2 | Stage III or IV (IAET guide) | Moist saline-soaked gauze dressings | Y | 20 weeks | 3 months |
| [ | RCT | 30 | Placebo | 1-100 cm2 at least 8-week duration | 118 | N | NM | NM | Non adherent saline soaked gauze | Y | 20 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | PDGF gel once daily | Placebo hydrogel | 1-16 cm2 | 46 | N | Y | Wagner grade I | Saline moistened gauze and nonadherent wound dressing | Y | 4 months | 6 months |
| [ | RCT | 0.01% rhPDGF-BB gel once a day | Standard wound care | 14.6 ± 13.2 at least 4-week duration | 20 | N | 8.05 ± 0.84 | Wagner's grade II | Moist saline and casting | Y | 20 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | PDGF gel 7 | Two active controls: antiseptics and hyperbaric oxygen therapy | 8-week duration | 60 | Y | NM | Equals to Wagner grade II, III | Saline moistened gauze | NM | 10 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | rhPDGF gel 0.01% | Active: KY Jelly (Ethnor) | 26-30 cm2 at least 4-week duration | 50 | Y | NM | IAET stage III and IV | Moist dressing | Y | 10 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT (phase III) | 0.01% PDGF gel containing 100 | Placebo | 1-40 cm2 at least 4 weeks | 111 | Y | <12% | Moist saline gauze | Y | 20 weeks | NM | |
| [ | RCT | Regranex (PDGF) 0.01% plus TheraGuaze | Active (TheraGuaze) | 1-8 cm2 | 32 | NM | <10% | Wagner grade I/II | TheraGuaze | Y | NM | Study period: 20 weeks |
PDGF: platelet-derived growth factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned; IAET: International Association of Enterostomal Therapy.
Outcomes of RCTs that evaluated PDGF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Type of growth factor | Wound closure | Mean time to heal in treatment groups | Mechanism mentioned as complete healing | Confounders | Further outcomes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granulation tissue | Reepithelialization | Sex | Baseline HbA1c | Wound size | Offloading | Recurrence rate | Amputation rate | ||||
| [ | PDGF-Becaplermin® | 50%, 35%, and 36% of complete healing in 100 | 86 days for 100 | NM | NM | NM | N | N | Y(+) | 30% in all groups | NM |
| [ | rhPDGF-BB gel | 48% complete healing in the PDGF group compared with 25% in the placebo group | 30 days in the PDGF and 40 days in the placebo group. | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 26% in PDGF treated versus 46% | NM |
| [ | Topical PDGF | 52% of healing in the test group versus 57% of healing in the control group (not significant) | 16 weeks | NM | Y | NM | N | Y(-) | Y(+) | NM | 3 cases in total |
| [ | rhPDGF-BB gel | All ulcers in both groups had healed by the end of the study period | 50.10 ± 23.38 days 41.8% reduction in healing time ( | NM | NM | NM | NM | N | Y(+) | NM | NM |
| [ | PDGF | Percentage of patients with complete wound contraction was significantly ( | 6.75-7.6 weeks | NM | NM | NM | NM | N | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | PDGF | 18 (72%) ulcers had healed in the control group and 15 (60%) in the test group ( | 10 weeks | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | PDGF gel | A significantly higher ( | 46 days ( | NM | Y | NM | NM | Y(-) | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | PDGF | The rates of wound closure with TheraGauze and TheraGauze + Becaplermin® were 0.37 and 0.41 cm2/week, respectively ( | 12 weeks | NM | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | N |
PDGF: platelet-derived growth factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Characteristics of RCTs that evaluated EGF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Study | Intervention | Type of control | Size and the oldness of the wound | No. of patients | Antibiotic application during the treatment period (if needed) | Baseline HbA1C (%) | Types of wound and grade of wound | Dressing type | Offloading | Treatment duration | Follow-up period posttherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | RCT | Thrice-per-week intralesional application of 75 | Placebo | >2 cm2 | 31 | Y | NM | Any grade | Antimicrobial dressing with ionic silver | Y | 8 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | EGF (75 or 25 | Placebo |
| 149 | Y | Y | Wagner's grade III or IV | Saline-moistened gauze | Y | 8 weeks | 12 months |
| [ | RCT | Topical application of beta urogastrone (rhEGF) gel. It was applied as a thick layer | Betadine dressing | 2-50 cm2 in the area | 50 | NM | NM | Wagner grades I and II | Dry sterilized gauze | NM | 8 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | Group 1 (control) was treated with Actovegin 5% cream (Actovegin), group 2 with Actovegin plus 0.02% (wt/wt) hEGF, and group 3 with Actovegin plus 0.04% (wt/wt) hEGF | Placebo | NM | 61 | NM | <12% | Wagner grades I and II | Saline dressing | NM | 12 weeks | 24 weeks |
| [ | RCT phase III | rhEGF 150 | Placebo | 2-50 cm2 | 60 | NM | NM | Wagner grades I and II | NM | NM | 15 weeks | NM |
EGF: Epidermal growth factor, Y: yes, N: no, NM: not mentioned.
Outcomes of RCTs that evaluated EGF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Type of growth factor | Wound closure | Mean time to heal in treatment groups | Mechanism mentioned as complete healing | Confounders | Further outcomes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granulation tissue | Reepithelialization | Sex | Baseline HbA1c | Wound size | Offloading | Recurrence rate | Amputation rate | ||||
| [ | EGF | More complete healing in the rhEGF group ( | 8 weeks | Y | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | EGF | Granulation tissue covering ≥50% of the ulcer at 2 weeks was achieved by more cases in the EGF groups ( | 3 weeks | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 2 cases in the placebo group | 29 cases in all groups |
| [ | EGF | Reduced seropurulent discharge in the EGF group | 17.2 ± 1.3 ( | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | EGF | More cases with complete healing in the 0.04% hEGF group. Patients in the 0.04% hEGF group also healed more quickly than those in the other groups ( | 6 weeks in the 0.04% hEGF group ( | Y | Y | N | NM | NM | NM | NM | 2 cases in placebo and 2 in 0.02% hEGF groups |
| [ | EGF, REGEN-D150 | For wounds >6 cm2 in size treatment resulted in more healing ( | 9 weeks | Y | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
EGF: epidermal growth factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Characteristics of RCTs that evaluated FGF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Study | Intervention | Type of control | Size and the oldness of the wound | No. of patients | Antibiotic application during the treatment period (if needed) | Baseline HbA1C (%) | Types of wound and grade of wound | Dressing type | Offloading | Treatment duration | Follow-up period posttherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | RCT | Topical rhaFGF (liquid) and rhbFGF at a dose of 100 U/0.1 mL/cm2 | Active (bFGF) | >2 cm in diameter | 139 | N | NM | NM | Sterile cotton dressings without antibiotics | NM | 6 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | 4 groups: | Placebo | >3 cm2 | 199 | N | NM | Grade II Wagner | NM | NM | 60 days | NM |
| [ | RCT | Liquid bFGF spray, 500 ng-100 ng/wound | Placebo | > 0.5 cm | 17 | Y | 7.1-7.9 | Wagner grades I–III | Sterile petrolatum impregnated gauze (no antiseptic) | Y | 18 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | 0.001% bFGF (50 | Placebo | 900 mm2 or less | 150 | Y | 10-16 | Wagner grade II | Silicone gauze | Y | 8 weeks | NM |
FGF: fibroblast growth factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Outcomes of RCTs that evaluated FGF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Type of growth factor | Wound closure | Time to heal | Mechanism mentioned as complete healing | Confounders | Further outcomes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granulation tissue | Reepithelialization | Sex | Baseline HbA1c | Wound size | Offloading | Recurrence rate | Amputation rate | ||||
| [ | rhaFGF and rhbFGF | Healing in rhbFGF by 6-week treatment. No significant difference between the healing potential of bFGF and aFGF | 42 days to complete healing in almost 50% of cases | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | Liquid aFGF and EGF | Healing in shorter period in the combination group ( | 36-47 days in combination-treated group versus control | Y | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | Liquid bFGF | No significant difference | Mean healing time: 9.3 weeks for the bFGF and 5.8 weeks for the control group | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | bFGF | The area of ulcer decreased by 57.5%, 72.3%, and 82.2% in the placebo, 0.001% in the bFGF, and 0.01% in the bFGF groups, respectively, and differences were significant between the 0.01% bFGF and placebo groups ( | NM | Y | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | Approximately 10% in all groups | NM |
FGF: fibroblast growth factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Characteristics of RCTs that evaluated G-CSF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Study | Intervention | Type of control | Size and the oldness of the wound | No. of patients | Antibiotic application during the treatment period (if needed) | Baseline HbA1C (%) | Types of wound and grade of wound | Dressing type | Offloading | Treatment duration | Follow-up period posttherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | RCT | Subcutaneous injection of G-CSF or saline solution for 7 days. The initial dose of G-CSF was 5 | Placebo | >2 cm2 | 40 | Y | 5·5–13·7% | NM | Standard foam dressings | NM | 7 days | NM |
| [ | RCT | Conventional antimicrobial treatment plus 263 mg of G-CSF subcutaneously daily for 21 days | Placebo | NM | 40 | Y | Y | Wagner grade III or IV | NM | Bed rest | 21 days | 6 months |
| [ | RCT | 5 | Placebo | 0.5-3 cm | 37 | Y | <12% | Wagner grade II or III | NM | Bed rest | 10 days | NM |
| [ | RCT | Subcutaneous injection of G-CSF and/or conventional therapy. The initial daily dose of G-CSF was 5 | Placebo | NM | 30 | Y | NM | Wagner grade II | NM | NM | NM | NM |
G-CSF: granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Outcomes of RCTs that evaluated G-CSF safety and effectiveness.
| Ref | Type of growth factor | Wound closure | Mean time to heal in treatment groups | Mechanism mentioned as complete healing | Confounders | Further outcomes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granulation tissue | Reepithelialization | Sex | Baseline HbA1c | Wound size | Offloading | Recurrence rate | Amputation rate | ||||
| [ | G-CSF | G-CSF therapy was associated with earlier eradication of pathogens from the infected ( | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 2 cases in the placebo group |
| [ | G-CSF | At the 3- and 9-week assessments, no significant differences in terms of complete closure of the ulcer without signs of underlying bone infection | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 15% in the G-CSF group and 45% in the control group. |
| [ | G-CSF | No foot ulcer had completely healed at the end of the study. Patients who received G-CSF did not have an earlier resolution of clinically defined cellulitis ( | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 2 cases in total from both groups |
| [ | G-CSF | No significant differences for duration of hospitalization, duration of parenteral antibiotic administration, time to resolution of infection, and need for amputation | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 13.3% in the treatment group and 20% in the placebo group. |
G-CSF: granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Other growth factor and recombinant proteins: characteristics of RCTs.
| Ref | Study | Intervention | Type of control | Size and the oldness of the wound | No. of patients | Antibiotic application during the treatment period (if needed) | Baseline HbA1C (%) | Types of wound and grade of wound | Dressing type | Offloading | Treatment duration | Follow-up period posttherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Phase I trial (RCT) | Topical telbermin (rhVEGF) (72 | Placebo | 1-4 cm2 | 55 | Y | 5.5-13.6% | Grade 1A | Covered with a sterile, semipermeable barrier and then wrapped with cotton gauze | Y | 6 weeks | 7-12 weeks |
| [ | RCT phase IIa study | Epoetin beta injected at a weight-adjusted dose of approximately 30 IU/kg/week subcutaneously plus standard treatment | Placebo | 4.09 ± 5.09 cm2 for a duration of 16.48 ± 18.58 months | 22 | NM | <8% | Wagner grade I or II | NM | Y | 12 weeks | 12 weeks |
| [ | RCT phase I/II | 2.5% or 8.5% talactoferrin gel administered topically twice daily to the ulcers with standard wound care | Placebo | 0.5 to 10 cm2 | 46 | Y | 6-13% | NM | Saline dressing | Y | 12 weeks | Up to 6 months |
| [ | RCT phase I/II | 1 or 10 | Placebo | 0.1-8.5cm2 | 40 | Y | NM | Wagner grades I, II, or early III | NM | Y | 20 weeks | NM |
| [ | RCT | Five groups: standard care, topical placebo collagen sponge, or topical collagen sponge containing TGF- | Placebo | 1-20 cm2 more than 8 weeks old | 177 | NM | <13% | NM | Collagen sponge and nonadherent dressing | Y | 21 weeks | 3 months |
VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; TGF-β: transforming growth factor β; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Other growth factor and recombinant proteins: outcomes of RCTs.
| Ref | Type of growth factor | Wound closure | Mean time to heal in treatment groups | Mechanism mentioned as complete healing | Confounders | Further outcomes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granulation tissue | Reepithelialization | Sex | Baseline HbA1c | Wound size | Offloading | Recurrence rate | Amputation rate | ||||
| [ | Topical rhVEGF (telbermin) | A positive however nonsignificant trend towards healing in the treated group | 32.5-43 days | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 27% in the VEGF group versus 33% in the placebo group | NM |
| [ | Erythropoietin, epoetin beta | No significant results. 26.7% of patients receiving EPO achieved complete wound closure within 12 weeks, whereas only 14.3% in the placebo control arm | 44 days | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | Talactoferrin gel | The active arms showed a trend toward improvement over placebo ( | 30 days | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM |
| [ | Chrysalin® (TP508 or rusalatide) | More than doubled the incidence of complete healing ( | 80 days to 100% closure in 10 | Y | Y | NM | NM | NM | NM | NM | 1 in 1 |
| [ | TGF beta2 | Proportion of patients with wound closure increased in TGF- | 13 weeks in high-dose TGF beta | NM | NM | N | N | Y(-) | NM | NM | NM |
VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; TGF-β: transforming growth factor β; Y: yes; N: no; NM: not mentioned.
Adverse events related to the intervention.
| Ref | Type of growth factor | Drug-related main adverse effects | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pain | Erythema and edema | Cellulitis | Infection | Others | ||
| [ | PDGF | N | N | N | N | |
| [ | FGF | N | N | N | N | |
| [ | EGF | N | N | N | N | Dizziness, shivering, and chills appeared more frequently in the EGF-treated groups, apparently dose-dependent |
| [ | G-CSF | N | N | N | N | Worsened liver function, skin efflorescence |
| [ | VEGF | N | N | N | N | |
| [ | Erythropoietin, epoetin beta | N | N | N | N | |
| [ | Talactoferrin | N | N | N | N | |
| [ | Chrysalin® | N | N | N | N | |
| [ | TGF- | N | N | N | N | |
PDGF: platelet-derived growth factor; G-CSF: granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; TGF-β: transforming growth factor β; N: no drug-related side effect.
Quality assessment based on Jadad score of randomized controlled trials reviewed.
| Study | Randomization | Blinding | Account of all patients | Total score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
| [ | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| [ | 2 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| [ | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
| [ | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Mean: 3.15 | ||||
| SD: 1.04 | ||||