Effectiveness of Double-layer Compression Therapy in the Healing of Chronic Venous Ulcers in Primary Health Care
- Conditions
- Venous Ulcers
- Interventions
- Device: Two multilayer compression bandageDevice: Crepe bandage
- Registration Number
- NCT02364921
- Lead Sponsor
- Gerencia de Atención Primaria, Madrid
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a multilayer compression bandage (two layers), compared with the crepe bandage, on healing of venous leg ulcers, in patients attended in nursing Primary Care Health Centres, at 12 weeks follow-up.
- Detailed Description
This study also compares the effectiveness of the multilayer and the crepe bandage, on healing of venous leg ulcers measured by the Resvech 2.0 scale and evaluates improvement in quality of life, measured by the Charing Cross Venous Ulcer Questionnaire (CCVUQ-e) and analyze the sociodemographic, clinical, and treatment factors associated with complete healing of venous ulcers.
Design: Multicentre, controlled, parallel group, randomized clinical trial, with blind evaluation of the response variable.
Setting: Primary Care Health Centres (Madrid). Subjects: Patients with venous leg ulcers, treated by nurses at the participating centres.
Intervention: Experimental group: multilayer compression bandage (two layers). Control group: crepe bandage.
Sample size: 216 patients (108 in each group) Variables:Main: Complete healing after 12 weeks follow-up. Secondary: Degree of healing (Resvech 2.0). Quality of life (CCVUQ-e). Adverse reactions. Related to the healing process: comorbidities, topical and systematic treatments, exercise, BMI. Prognostic factors: location, number and duration of ulcer. Sociodemographic factors Data analysis: By intention to treat. Comparative analysis of the two groups (chi-squared or t-test). Effectiveness analysis sing Kaplan-Meier, log rank test and cox regression analysis
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 93
- People With a diagnosis of chronic venous ulcer over six weeks duration.
- Presence of a larger Ankle Arm index (ABI) of 0.8 and less than 1.3.
- People Able to follow the trial own demands, able to understand the questionnaires, with no intention of moving and localizable for the duration of the study.
- That give written informed consent to participate
- Patients diagnosed with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus (last HbA1c greater than 7).
- In Antineoplastic therapy.
- Decompensated heart -insufficience .
- Dermatitis acute phase, at the time of the study.
- Rheumatoid-arthritis.
- Thrombosis Venosa (DVT) in acute phase.
- Patients with mixed ulcers
- Patients who participate simultaneously in another clinical trial.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Two-layer compression bandage Two multilayer compression bandage Two multilayer compression bandage: Usual clinical practice in venous ulcer in wound care in assessing, cleaning, desinfection, debridement and topical treatment.Measure the ankle circumference and choose the correct kit accordingly (ankle size 18-25cm or 25-32cm). Apply one to seven days crepe bandage Crepe bandage Crepe bandage: Usual clinical practice in venous ulcer in wound care. crepe bandage apply one to seven days
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method degree of scarring achieved measured by Resverch 2.0 twelve weeks degree of scarring achieved measured by the questionnaire Resverch 2.0
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Quality of Life measured by Charing Cross Venous Ulcer Questionnaire (CCVUQ-e) twelve weeks Quality of Life measured by the test Charing Cross Venous Ulcer Questionnaire (CCVUQ-e)
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Carmen Folguera
🇪🇸Madrid, Spain