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Clinical Trials/NCT01579227
NCT01579227
Unknown
Not Applicable

Efficacy Of Tocotrienol a Natural Vitamin E In Biopsy Wound.

Chandan K Sen1 site in 1 country101 target enrollmentJanuary 2012
ConditionsScar

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Scar
Sponsor
Chandan K Sen
Enrollment
101
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
WOUND CLOSURE
Last Updated
8 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The following two objectives are proposed in healthy subjects to characterize (1) wound closure, (2) scar formation/appearance, and (3) inflammatory response:

Objective 1, (topical only - referred to as "TOP") - Topical application of Tocotrienol (TCT) vs placebo in bilateral punch biopsy

Objective 2, (oral and topical - referred to as "OTOP") - Combined oral supplementation and topical application of tocotrienol (TCT) vs placebo in bilateral punch biopsy

Objective 3, (topical only - referred to as "TAM") - Topical application of tamoxifen vs placebo in bilateral punch biopsy.

Objective 4, (topical only to normal skin) - Topical application of TCT vs placebo on bilateral lets on normal skin.

Detailed Description

* In nature, the vitamin E family is split into two classes: tocopherols (TCP) and tocotrienols (TCT). Members of the TCP and TCT family are biologically unique. * TCP are mainly found in green leafy vegetables while TCT are the primary vitamin E of seeds, including cereal grains such as wheat, rice, and barley. * Vitamin E is thought to improve wound healing by inhibiting collagen synthesis and attenuating fibroblast proliferation and inflammation. However, outcomes based scientific literature on the therapeutic efficacy of vitamin E in skin wound closure is scant and has primarily focused on TCP. * Oral supplementation of TCP showed modest improvement in rodent wound closure, but the relevance of oral TCP supplementation in rats already receiving high dose vitamin E in a standard laboratory is questionable. * Topical TCP on surgical wounds of children have been shown to improve wound healing; yet no mechanistic basis for the observed effect was described. * Preliminary observations from the PI's active IRB protocol to test TCT in scar appearance of surgical wounds led us to evaluate the potential of TCT vitamin E to improve wound closure in healthy subjects. To date, the therapeutic efficacy of TCT in either topical (TOP) or oral with topical (OTOP) applications for skin wound healing remains to be reported. * Preliminary observations also made show down-regulation of microRNA-200b supports cutaneous angiogenesis, the most important step in cutaneous wound healing. Tamoxifen silences mircroRNA-200b and later work has recognized that under non-neoplastic conditions, tamoxifen may induce angiogenesis.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
January 2012
End Date
December 2018
Last Updated
8 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Chandan K Sen
Responsible Party
Sponsor Investigator
Principal Investigator

Chandan K Sen

Professor

Ohio State University

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Ages- 18-50 (Both Male \& Female)
  • Non-smoker - having quit at least 3 months prior to enrollment
  • Non-diabetic
  • Non-pregnant or non-breastfeeding - verbal assent.
  • If a female subject of childbearing age misses her menstrual period after the start of the study, she will inform the investigators and be given a pregnancy test to ensure, for safety reasons, that she is not pregnant. If she is pregnant, she will discontinue participation in the study.
  • No current use of OTC medications or other form of supplements containing vitamin-E

Exclusion Criteria

  • Diabetes or HIV diagnosis
  • Alcohol or drug abuse
  • unable to provide informed consent
  • Therapeutically anti-coagulated
  • Currently prescribed immunosuppressant medication

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

WOUND CLOSURE

Time Frame: 1-2 month(s)

Wound closure will be assessed by results of conventional camera and thermal imaging in Group 1 and Group 2 subjects.

Secondary Outcomes

  • SCARRING(1-2 month (s))

Study Sites (1)

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