Study to Evaluate Bacterial Activity That Drives the Progression of Clinical Infection



Status:Withdrawn
Conditions:Infectious Disease, Podiatry, Diabetes
Therapuetic Areas:Endocrinology, Immunology / Infectious Diseases, Orthopedics / Podiatry
Healthy:No
Age Range:21 - Any
Updated:2/28/2019
Start Date:February 1, 2019
End Date:June 1, 2024

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The investigators plan to enroll up to 750 subjects over the course of 5 years. Study
duration will be 2 visits over 7 days (+/-3). Participants will be consented and undergo
baseline procedures. Participants will be grouped into 1 of 3 groups, based on infection and
antibiotic status at screening. Debridement will be performed per standard of care and
collection of tissue will be taken from this discarded tissue. A blood draw will be performed
at each of these two visits as well. This is for research purposes only. All other data will
be obtained from the electronic medical record. All standard of care except for the blood
draws.

Study Groups:

Participants will be divided 1:1:1 into groups with

- Cohort 1: clinically uninfected (1A and 1C) ulcers.

- Cohort 2: clinically infected (redness, edema, induration, heat, exudate,
tenderness/pain (1B and 1D)) with no recent antibiotic therapy (within 28 days)

- Cohort 3: clinically infected (redness, edema, induration, heat, exudate,
tenderness/pain (1B and 1D)) on antibiotic therapy

Duration of Subject Participation

- Screening: Within 7 days of baseline visit

- Baseline (can be the same day)

- Week 1 visit: one week after baseline.

- Follow-up period - EMR: 6 months from baseline measurements

- Total duration of subject participation: Up to 6 months

Study Procedures:

Screening

1. Explain purpose and nature of the study and obtain signature on the informed consent
document and HIPAA Authorization. 2. Screen the subject against protocol inclusion and
exclusion criteria, including all pertinent tests.

Baseline (may be done as same day as screening procedures). This visit may last 1.4-2 hours.

1. Obtain general medical history, demographic information and social history.

2. Complete a physical examination of the foot, body weight, height, and vital signs,
including measurement of resting heart rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure while
seated.

3. Select the target ulcer.

4. Obtain complete history pertinent to ulcer disease including duration of the target
ulcer, previous and current treatment.

5. Perform debridement if indicated. Debridement is to be performed using a curette,
scissors, scalpel, or forceps.

6. Obtain study samples a. 2 blood samples - one for serum and one collected in PAXgene
tubes b. 5 tissue samples - one frozen, one fixed in formalin, one placed in RNAlater,
one fixed for confocal microscopy and one prepped for SEM analysis.

7. Assess the post-debridement ulcer size using a ruler.

8. Perform standardized photography of the study wound.

9. Perform additional vascular and neuropathy studies.

10. Collect all relevant concomitant medications for the previous 28 days.

11. Clinician will perform standard wound care, including wound measurements and
photography, and apply appropriate dressings/treatment.

12. Record wound treatment applied including off-loading and debridement.

13. Urine pregnancy test if needed.

Week 1: this visit will not take longer than a normal standard of care visit.

1. Assess target ulcer

2. Debridement is to be performed using curette, scissors, scalpel, or forceps.

3. Obtain study samples a. 2 blood samples - one for serum and one collected in PAXgene
tubes b. 5 tissue samples- one frozen, one fixed in formalin, one placed in RNAlater,
one fixed for confocal microscopy and one prepped for Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)
analysis.

4. Perform standard of care wound care per physician discretion including wound
measurements and standardized photography of the study wound.

5. Clinician will perform standard wound care, including wound measurements and
photography, and apply appropriate dressings/treatment.

6. Record wound treatment applied including off-loading and debridement.

7. Any changes in concomitant medications since baseline will be recorded.

8. Subject stipend disbursement.

Follow up assessment through medical record

1. Wound healing - includes closure or changes in wound size

2. Wound treatment - includes details/changes in treatment regimen.

3. Labs/Concomitant medications/studies related to wound treatment - includes any studies
relative to the medical status, wound status, infection, etc.

4. Dehiscence - will be defined as any site along the site of surgical wound closure that
fails to have 100% epithelialization without drainage at the time sutures are removed.
Often part of the surgical wound will dehisce after it is closed. Therefore, the
investigators will evaluate the time until the wound is completely healed. For surgical
wounds this will be the time sutures are removed with complete epithelialization of the
study wound, or secondary wound healing after previous surgical closure has dehisced.

5. Wound infection - infection will be defined and stratified base in the Infectious
Disease Society of Americas classification and criteria.

6. Amputation - The investigators will document amputation using an ordinal scale (no
additional amputation, toe and metatarsal, transmetatarsal amputation, midfoot
amputation, below the knee, knee disarticulation, and above the knee amputation).

7. Foot related adverse events including hospitalization.

8. The investigators will assess perfusion using Arterial dopplers (bedside may be done for
screening if formal ABIs have not yet been performed/resulted) as part of the screening
procedures. If other procedures are collected as part of standard of care, those data
may be acquired from the medical record.

Inclusion Criteria:

- Ankle Brachial Index (ABI) ≥ 0.5 (bedside ABI is acceptable for screening purposes as
the formal imaging ABI may not be resulted prior to surgery)

- One or more chronic lower extremity wounds that are located in the ankle area or
below that has persisted a minimum of 30 days prior to the Screening visit,
however, only one wound per subject will be included.

- Ulcer grade I or II, Stage A-D, according to University of Texas Wound
Classification System

- ≥21 years of age or older

- Diagnosis of diabetes mellitus

Exclusion Criteria:

- • Subject has major immunodeficiency

- Subject is human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)+

- Subject has untreated osteomyelitis

- Subject has active cellulitis

- Subject has active charcot

- Is pregnant or plans to become pregnant

- Is nursing or actively lactating

- Developmental disability/significant psychological disorder that in the opinion
of the investigator could impair the subject's ability to provide informed
consent, participate in the study protocol or record study measures, including
untreated schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and psychiatric hospitalization within
the last 2 years

- Active alcohol or substance abuse in the opinion of the investigator that could
impair the subject's ability to provide informed consent, participate in the
study protocol or record study materials
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