Negative Pressure Wound Therapy Compared to Traditional Care After Skin Grafting

Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2018
Split‐thickness skin grafting (STSG) is one of the most commonly used techniques in reconstructive plastic surgery and dermatology. Skin grafts are being used to cover skin defects caused by multiple etiologies. Traditionally, patients are immobilized in bed or in wheelchair for up to five days after surgery. Long immobilization decreases patients overall ability to function and increases the length of the stay in hospital. Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) have been used successfully in treatment of acute, chronic and diabetic ulcers. It is proposed that NPWT increases capillary blood flow, decreases bacterial contamination, seroma formation and swelling. Using NPWT on split‐thickness skin grafts after burns is well documented. It increases skin graft take ratio and speeds up healing. Aim of this study is to compare NPWT to traditional treatment after STSG for any indication in patients aged 18 to 99. This is a two‐arm, multicenter, randomized prospective trial with 160 patients.
Epistemonikos ID: d11931680d3be46c2ee4d602a6ffee8ecbf0aa49
First added on: May 21, 2024