Venous leg ulcers (VLUs) account for approximately 70% of all lower limb ulcers and affect an estimated 0.032% to 1% of the population in Western countries, corresponding to approximately 265,000 to 650,000 individuals in France. Effective management of VLUs is essential to reduce patient burden and associated healthcare costs. Compression therapy is the cornerstone of VLU treatment , as it improves venous return, reduces oedema, and promotes wound healing. Multilayer compression bandage systems, including two-layer systems, are considered the gold standard, and in France, they are recommended as first-line treatment for VLUs. The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether the Mepi™ Press 2 compression system is non-inferior to UrgoK2® in the treatment of venous leg ulcers in adult patients. The main question it aims to answer is: -Is Mepi™ Press 2 non-inferior to UrgoK2® in terms of the proportion of completely healed VLUs within 12 weeks? Researchers will compare Mepi™ Press 2 with UrgoK2® to determine whether similar clinical efficacy, performance, and safety can be achieved. Participants are adult patients with venous leg ulcers of less than 24 months duration requiring treatment with a two-layer compression bandage system. The study is multicenter, involving approximately 25 sites in France, and plans to enroll 386 participants. Participants will: * Receive compression therapy with either Mepi™ Press 2 or UrgoK2® in accordance with standard of care * Receive an appropriate primary wound dressing prior to compression * Attend up to five study visits over a period of up to 12 weeks (or until wound healing, whichever occurs first) * Be assessed for wound healing, safety, and device performance throughout the study
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
386
A two-layer compression system consisting of a padded bandage and a cohesive short-stretch bandage with visual indicator. Provides therapeutic compression to support venous leg ulcer management. Applied with an appropriate primary wound dressing and changed as clinically indicated.
A two-layer compression system composed of a short-stretch bandage and a cohesive long-stretch bandage designed to achieve therapeutic compression (\~40 mmHg). Used for venous leg ulcer management with an appropriate primary wound dressing.
Appropriate primary wound dressing applied prior to compression therapy according to standard of care.
Clinique du Parc-Montpellier
Castelnau-le-Lez, France
CHU Michallon Grenoble
Grenoble, France
Clinique du Parc Lyon
Lyon, France
Hopital Edouard Herriot_HCL
Lyon, France
CHU Nantes
Nantes, France
Poitiers Polyclinique
Poitiers, France
CHU Toulouse/Hopital Rangueil
Toulouse, France
Clinique Pasteur-Toulouse
Toulouse, France
Percentage of patients with complete healing of their VLU
Healing assessment is performed by the site investigator through clinical examination of the wound at the investigational site, during each of the follow-up visits.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 1(Day 0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0+ 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare reduction of VLU wound area (absolute and relative).
Absolute and percentage VLU wound surface area reduction compared to baseline at all follow-up visits .
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 1(Day 0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0+ 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare proportions of participants reaching 40% wound area reduction at 4 weeks
Proportion of participants reaching ≥40% relative wound area reduction (RWAR) at 4 weeks
Time frame: From enrollment to the follow-up visit at 4 weeks, Visit 1(Day 0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days)
Compare time to complete wound healing
Time to wound healed in each cohort, for patients with healed wound at termination.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 1(Day 0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0+ 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare quality-of-life during treatment and up to 12 weeks.
Quality of Life assessed with Wound-QoL-17 tool at each visit and change compared to baseline.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 0 (D0) , Visit 1 (D0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day) ,Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0 + 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare comfort and usability as rated by the participant
At each follow-up visit, participants will complete a usability questionnaire including Likert scale assessments.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 1 (D0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0 + 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare usability as rated by the healthcare professional.
At each visit, the treating investigator will complete a usability questionnaire including Likert scale assessments; at baseline, only a limited set of questions will be collected.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 0 (D0), Visit 1 (D0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0 + 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare device use including frequency of change
A summary and comparison of the compression use, including frequency of dressing/compression changes and primary dressing used, and type and size of compression used in relation to ankle size
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks, Visit 0 (D0), Visit 1 (D0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0 + 8 weeks ± 4 days),Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
Compare safety profiles of both bandages.
A(D)E and SA(D)E and DD rates.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 12 weeks,Visit 1 (D0 + 2 weeks ± 1 day), Visit 2 (D0 + 4 weeks ± 3 days), Visit 3 (D0 + 8 weeks ± 4 days), Visit 4 (D0 + 12 weeks ± 4 day)s
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