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Study is on administrative enrollment hold.
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Multicentered randomized controlled study with adaptive design to evaluate if Intermittent Electrical Stimulation (IES) decreases progression and facilitates healing of pressure injuries for patients with, sacral / ischial pressure injuries.
This is a two-arm, prospective randomized control trial assessing whether IES combined with the standard of care (treatment) is superior to the standard of care alone (control). The study is a parallel design, adaptive, non-blinded randomized controlled trial, and uses two-sided analysis. We plan interim analyses at each 25% of the N. Part of the early interim analyses (first and second) will involve reassessing the a priori assumptions on data distributions and variability use in sample size calculations and updating the study size needed. Treatment effect results will be shared with the Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) to determine whether the study should be ended early for either futility or having demonstrated superiority of the intervention. Patients can be entered into the protocol multiple times with independent assessments of inclusion/exclusion criteria and new consent for each enrollment. At each enrollment they will be re-randomized to either experimental or control arm. For the purpose of overall survival analysis (the only endpoint with a delayed assessment of outcome), such patients will be excluded.
This trial studies adult inpatients in both ICU and non-ICU environments with either new or established stage 1 or stage 2 sacral and ischial pressure injuries. Patients with a pacemaker/AICD, rhabdomyolysis, gluteal skin breakdown, and unstable fractures at risk of displacement by IES are excluded. Patients with atrial or ventricular wires after cardiac surgery can be enrolled as long as they are not being paced or in the opinion of the treating physician are at high risk of requiring pacing.
Subjects will be assessed for pressure injury status from point of randomization to discharge, death, or a minimum of 30 days. Device utilization and data collection can stop after 14 days in a non-ICU environment or when a total of 30 days of data collection has been met. If subjects are in the ICU longer than 30 days or when the combined total of ICU and less than 14 non-ICU days is greater than 30 days, the assessment and use of the device may continue after 30 days. Following entry into the study, participants will receive either the IES device in addition to the standard of care (treatment group) or the standard of care alone (control group). The study is expected to complete accrual within 12-18 months. Participant treatment will occur for the same amount of time as pressure injury assessment occurs as described above.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intermittent electrical stimulation system (IES) treatment Group | Active Comparator | Charged pulses will be administered to bilateral gluteus maximus through surface electrodes. Stimulation occurs at 30 Hz for 10 seconds every 10 minutes. |
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| Standard of care Group | Active Comparator | Standard inpatient nursing practice for wound care, wound care prevention, and any other wound care or plastic surgery treatments deemed appropriate as per usual care. |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intermittent electrical stimulation system (IES) treatment and turning patient every two hours | Device | The investigators propose to assess whether addition of the IES system and the use of standard of care wound care and wound prevention reduces the morbidity of sacral and ischial pressure injuries by decreasing progression of stage 1 and stage 2 ulcers or facilitates their healing compared to standard wound care in an inpatient critical care population. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Efficacy of adding the IES System to standard of care | Investigators will assess the IES System to determine the efficacy of an IES system after being added to the standard of care on the primary outcome of sacral and ischial pressure injury score measured over time. | 24 hours of admission to the ICU or non-ICU hospital service |
| Compare using the IES oppose to only standard care | Investigators will assess time to resolution of the ulcer | 24 hours of admission to the ICU or non-ICU hospital service |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Compare IES to standard care | Time to resolution of ulcer | 24 hours of admission to the ICU or non-ICU hospital service |
| Evaluate treatment effect heterogeneity across levels of the following patient factors |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Chase Donaldson, MD | The Cleveland Clinic | Principal Investigator |
| Andrea Kurz, MD | The Cleveland Clinic | Study Chair |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wake Forest Unverisity | Winston-Salem | North Carolina | 27109 | United States | ||
| Cleveland Clinic Foundation |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 38730383 | Derived | Donaldson C, de Abreu MG, Mascha EJ, Rowbottom J, Harvester E, Khanna A, Sura T, Sessler DI, Patarroyo FR, Gulluoglu A, Zajic P, Chauhan U, Essber H, Kurz A. Pressure injury treatment by intermittent electrical stimulation (PROTECT-2): protocol for a multicenter randomized clinical trial. Trials. 2024 May 10;25(1):313. doi: 10.1186/s13063-024-08085-x. |
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| Turning population every two hours | Other | The investigators propose to assess whether current standard of care wound care and wound prevention reduces the morbidity of sacral and ischial pressure injuries. |
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A variety of patient factors will be evaluated for treatment effect heterogeneity
| 24 hours of admission to the ICU or non-ICU hospital service until discharged |
| Cleveland |
| Ohio |
| 44195 |
| United States |
| Univeristy of Graz | Graz | A-8010 | Austria |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D003668 | Pressure Ulcer |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D012883 | Skin Ulcer |
| D012871 | Skin Diseases |
| D017437 | Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D013812 | Therapeutics |
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