One in four Veterans is affected by diabetes and will develop a diabetic foot ulcer. Diabetic ulcers are very challenging to manage and are the most common cause of leg amputation. Many advanced treatments are expensive and difficult to use in the clinic or at home. Those newer therapies have shown little success in healing diabetic foot wounds. The investigators' laboratory and animal work has suggested that a safe medication, currently used as an eye drop for treatment of glaucoma, can heal these ulcers. The investigators are proposing to test this drop (timolol) directly on the surface of the foot ulcer to see if can improve healing faster than the current standard of care. To do this, the investigators propose a "randomized controlled trial" with two groups of patients with diabetic foot ulcers: one will receive standard of care with timolol while the other will receive standard of care with a gel (hydrogel, as placebo medicine).
The trial is designed as a prospective, randomized, double-blinded controlled study of subjects presenting with diabetic foot ulcers. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the superiority of Timoptic-XE therapy in conjunction with standard of care (SOC) treatment (Group A: Timoptic-XE + SOC) versus SOC (Group B: SOC + plus a non-biologically active gel, i.e., hydrogel, as placebo medication) in the clinical effectiveness in promoting wound healing and closure.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
48
Topical application of Timolol on non-healing diabetic foot ulcers
Topical application of non biologically active gel (Hydrogel- standard of care) on non-healing diabetic foot ulcers
VA Northern California Health Care System, Mather, CA
Sacramento, California, United States
Percentage of Complete Wound Closure, as Assessed Over a 12 Week Period
Complete wound closure will be assessed by Investigators and is defined as 100% epithelialization of the wound site ("skin re-epithelialization without drainage or dressing requirements by Week 12). The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with complete wound healing by the end of the treatment phase, evaluated using Fisher's exact test.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Safety Outcome Measurement of Timolol Serum
Safety outcome measurement of timolol serum during the treatment phase. Serum Timolol levels were assessed in all participants receiving SOC + Timolol. Most levels were below the detectable limit (\<0.22 ng/mL), suggesting minimal systemic absorption. Three participants exhibited detectable levels, with one case of a protocol deviation involving excessive application resulting in a serum level of 1.00 ng/mL. No systemic effects were observed in these cases, supporting the safety profile of topical Timolol.
Time frame: 12 weeks
The Time to Wound Closure Between the Two Groups
Time frame: 31 weeks
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