Cell-based engineered skin substitutes are promising to treat difficult-to-heal acute and chronic wounds such as large/deep burns, ulcers resistant to conventional therapies or surgical wounds. Cultured autologous epidermal cell-based therapy is used for more than two decades as permanent wound coverage for large burns. Although this technique has been shown to improve outcomes in patients with large burn injuries, its clinical use is limited by the creation of a second wound at the donor site, the three-week delay needed to obtain sufficient amounts of cells, and the absence of a dermal component resulting in low graft take and wound contraction. Concurrently, allogeneic cell-based engineered skin substitutes have been proposed. Where they offer off-the-shelf temporary wound coverage acting as biologically active dressings releasing growth factors, cytokines and extra cellular matrix components essential for proper wound healing, they are susceptible of immune rejection that is their major weakness Fetal skin, before the third trimester of gestational age, heals rapidly without scar formation conversely to adult skin. Minimal inflammation, specific cytokine and growth factor profiles, and faster and organized deposit and turnover of Extra Cellular Matrix (ECM) components during fetal wound healing have been proposed to explain the absence of scar formation. Because of their low immunogenicity, and their unique regeneration properties, fetal skin cells represent an attractive alternative to the commonly used autologous and allogenic cutaneous grafts. The investigators developed a new healing dressing constituted by a collagen sponge seeded with a specific ratio of active fetal fibroblasts and keratinocytes producing a variety of wound healing growth factors and cytokines which increase the speed of wound healing, induce an immunotolerant state, with a low inflammatory reaction. This prospective randomized controlled study aims to compare wound healing of CICAFAST versus conventional treatment (JELONET®) in the treatment of split-thickness skin graft donor site at D8. The patient will be his own control.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
28
to test a biological dressing on the wound healing of the split-thickness skin graft donor site
standard intervention : Paraffin gauze dressing on the wound healing
Chu de Nantes
Nantes, France
CHU de Nantes
Nantes, France
wound healing
The number of complete healing at D8 judged by physician observer. Healing is defined as 80% or more wound closure.
Time frame: Day 8
concordance between the healing at D8 (or D11 and D15) judged by physician observer and by another physician using photographs
The healing at D8 (or D11 or D15 if the healing is not completed) judged by an expert physician on picture. Healing is defined as 80% or more wound closure.
Time frame: Day 8 (or D11 and D15 if the healing is not completed)
wound healing's rapidity of CICAFAST versus conventional treatment (JELONET®) in the treatment of STSG donor site.
Time to healing (in days) judged by physician observer
Time frame: D8 And D11 (if the healing is not completed) and D15 (if the healing is not completed)
tolerance of CICAFAST versus the conventional treatment (JELONET®)
• AE notification: case of infection: patients with grade 1 or 2 infections may be controlled by antibiotherapy. Patients with grade 3 or 4 infection or with biological dressing (CICAFAST) rejection will have CICAFAST dressing removed. However they will stay in the study. Immunological monitoring will be performed to follow a CICAFAST reject of the patient at donor site level.
Time frame: 6 months
pain of the wound healing with CICAFAST versus conventional treatment (JELONET®)
Number of painful day/wound from the surgery until the complete healing
Time frame: Day 8 And D11 (if the healing is not completed) and D15 (if the healing is not completed)
quality of the wound healing with CICAFAST versus conventional treatment (JELONET®)
Evaluation of the quality of the wound healing by an observer (physician who will not do the patient surgery) at M3 and M6, OSAS (observer scar assessment scale ; 1= normal skin, 10= worst imaginable scar) will be used. By the patient PSAS (patient scar assessment scale ; 1= normal skin, 10= very different) will be used and expertise on picture by 2 external experts (Visual Analogue Scale 10 the worst scar to 1 like normal skin). A second evaluation of complete healing will be performed by two exterior independent experts evaluating the photographs taken until complete healing (Healing is defined as 80% or more wound closure)
Time frame: 6 months
quality of the wound healing with CICAFAST versus conventional treatment (JELONET®) for the patient who will have confocal microscopy
Results of scars confocal microscopy at M3
Time frame: 3 months
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