This is a Phase IIa open, randomised, single and parallel group, therapy controlled, single centre study, which has been divided into 3 sequential phases, which are designed to study respectively, (a) the time taken to achieve surface anaesthesia, (b) the extent of post-operative pain relief and (c) the depth and quality of anaesthesia during a leg ulcer surgical debridement procedure
As part of the study, patients with leg ulcers (venous, arterial, mixed aetiology or lymphoedema) requiring surgical debridement will attend 4 visits to the study centre (Day 0, Day 1, Day 7 and Day 14). After informed consent and screening for inclusion / exclusion criteria patients will be managed as follows: Phase 1 (N=10 patients): This is a pilot (non-comparative) phase designed to assess safety, pharmacokinetics and achievement of clinically acceptable levels of surface analgesia for Tri-Solfen in the intended patient population, prior to surgical wound debridement. Prior to surgical debridement all patients will have a single application of the Tri-Solfen product 2mL/10cm2 wound area) administered. The product will be allowed to remain in contact with the wound bed for 1 minute and surface anaesthesia will then be tested by needle-stick for up to 30 minutes after application (at 1, 3, 5, 10, 20 and 30 minutes, i.e. testing will stop when the needle stick can no longer be felt). In parallel serial blood draws of 10mL will be taken at 2min, 30min, 1 hr, 2hrs and 6hrs after application to determine systemic absorption of lidocaine and bupivacaine. Surgical debridement will proceed after a needle stick can no longer be felt and will cease when either the wound bed is deemed to be clean and free from necrotic tissue in the presence of punctate bleeding or where pain increases to an unacceptable level as defined by the patient. Pain assessments will be carried out during the procedure and at 2 min, 30 min, 1 hour, 6 hrs and 24 hours after the procedure is complete. Phase 2 (N=40 patients; 20 per group): This is a comparative phase of Tri-Solfen vs standard of care in the management of post-operative analgesia. All patients will receive standard of care (i.e. 60 mins of EMLA Cream) to anaesthetise the leg ulcer and will undergo surgical debridement after a needle stick can no longer be felt and will cease when either the wound bed is deemed to be clean and free from necrotic tissue in the presence of punctate bleeding or where pain increases to an unacceptable level as defined by the patient. On completion of surgical debridement, patients will be randomised to one of two groups: * Group 1: a single application of Tri-Solfen (2mL/10cm2) with standard of care post-surgical analgesia (e.g. paracetamol, NSAID or opiate) provided as required (N=20), or * Group 2: standard of care post-surgical analgesia (e.g. paracetamol, NSAID or opiate) as required only (N=20). Serial blood draws of 10mL from the Tri-Solfen group will be taken at 2min, 30min, 1 hr, 2hrs and 6hrs after application of Tri-Solfen to determine systemic absorption of lidocaine and bupivacaine. Pain assessments and extent of analgesia required will also be carried out at 2 min, 30 min, 1 hour, 6 hrs and 24 hours. Phase 3 (N=40 patients; 20 per group). Since debridement of the wound may result in removal of surface anaesthesia, this phase is intended to compare the quality of anaesthesia from standard of care (single application of EMLA cream from administration over 60 minutes) with one application of Tri-Solfen administered pre-surgical debridement, and one application on completion of surgery. Safety and quality of anaesthesia / analgesia in the intended patient population before, during and after the surgical debridement procedure will be monitored. Prior to debridement, patients will be randomised to either: * Group 1: Tri-Solfen (2mL/10cm2) administered once prior to wound debridement and once on completion of surgical debridement (N=20) * Group 2: EMLA cream (1-2g /10cm2). administered to the wound for 60 minutes under an occlusive dressing (N=20). In both groups, the time taken to achieve clinically acceptable surface anaesthesia required to perform the surgical procedure will be assessed using a needle-stick at the wound site. In patients receiving Tri-Solfen, this will be performed at 1, 3, 5, 10, 20 and 30 minutes after application of the Tri-Solfen - assessments will stop when the needle can no longer be detected by the patient. Needle stick testing will also be undertaken immediately following removal of EMLA cream after 60 minutes in EMLA-treated patients to provide a baseline comparator of pre-operative anaesthetic efficacy. Surgical debridement will proceed only after a needle stick can no longer be felt and will cease when either the wound bed is deemed to be clean and free from necrotic tissue in the presence of punctate bleeding or where pain increases to an unacceptable level as defined by the patient. Pain assessments will be carried out during the procedure and at 2 min, 30 min, 1 hour, 6 hrs and 24 hours after the procedure is complete. Serial blood draws of 10mL from the Tri-Solfen group will be taken at 2min, 30min, 1 hr, 2hrs and 6hrs after application of the first dose of Tri-Solfen to determine systemic absorption of lidocaine and bupivacaine from multiple dosing. All Phases Patients will be followed up for two weeks to confirm that the use of the Tri-Solfen (or EMLA) product do not adversely affect wound healing and to assess the incidence of adverse events, including wound infections
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
90
Welsh Wound Innovation Centre
Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGLidocaine Maximum Plasma Concentration
Blood draws to determine systemic levels of lidocaine
Time frame: Day 0 - Day 1
Bupivacaine Maximum Plasma Concentration
Blood draws to determine systemic levels of bupivacaine
Time frame: Day 0 - Day 1
Local tolerability assessments
Numerical Rating Scale (0-4) for itch, burn, pain, oedema, exudate, inflammation
Time frame: Day 0 - Day 1
Local tolerability assessments
Numerical Rating Scale (0-1) for presence of bleeding and wound infection
Time frame: Day 0 - Day 1
Pain on Application
Numerical Rating Scale (0-3) of none, mild, moderate, severe
Time frame: 1 minute
Time taken to achieve clinically acceptable surface anaesthesia
Perception of needle-stick at the wound site
Time frame: 0-30 minutes after application
Pain during wound debridement
Verbal pain assessment by the patient during wound debridement
Time frame: 10-15 minutes
Clinical adequacy of wound debridement
Percentage of wound debrided
Time frame: On completion of surgery
Duration of post-operative pain relief
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Assessment of the duration of post-operative pain relief using a VAS
Time frame: Up to 24 hours