From the Journals

Nitric oxide–generating dressing holds promise for diabetic foot ulcers


 

FROM WOUND REPAIR AND REGENERATION

Physicians and nurses turn to a wide variety of kinds of dressings to treat patients with diabetic foot ulcers (DFU). Now, new data from an industry-funded study suggest that an experimental nitric oxide-generating dressing holds promise as a tool to reduce diabetic foot wound size in certain cases.

Balkonsky/Thinkstock

The treatment is still in the research stage, and it’s not clear whether more studies will be conducted. For now, though, “we have a topical agent which specifically treats infection as well as increases perfusion of the ulcer,” study lead author Michael E. Edmonds, MD, a professor of diabetes and endocrinology at King’s College Hospital in London, said in an interview. “The study also showed that the agent not only improved healing but significantly reduced serious adverse events related to the ulcer, which included hospitalizations and amputations.”

The study appeared online April 4 in Wound Repair and Regeneration.

Researchers estimate that DFUs affect as many as 4% of patients with diabetes each year, with about a quarter developing the condition over their lifetimes.

A 2014 U.S. study found that 4%-5% percentage of patients with DFUs underwent lower limb amputations over a 12-month period. The same study also estimated that DFU-related care costs as much as $13 billion a year. (Diabetes Care. 2014 Mar;37[3]:651-8)

Dr. Bill Tettelbach

Dr. Bill Tettelbach

“There is no straightforward guideline to choose dressing,” said wound care specialist William H. Tettelbach, MD, the medical director of infection prevention, wound care, and antibiotic stewardship at Landmark Hospital in Salt Lake City, in an interview. Instead, he said, there are just some general tenets: Use an absorbing dressing for a wet ulcer, a moist dressing for a dry ulcer, and an antimicrobial dressing for a bacterial ulcer.

The new multi-center, randomized, controlled phase 2/3 study – funded by the biotech company Edixomed – examined the use of a nitric oxide–generating dressing known as EDX110. The dressing consists of a moist mesh and a second layer that keeps the first layer in place.

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