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    Efficacy and optimal dose of acetic acid to treat colonised burns wounds: protocol for a pilot randomised controlled trial.

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    Author
    Imran, Rizwana
    Hassouna, Tarek
    Sur, Gurneet
    Casey, Anna
    Homer, Victoria
    Barton, Darren
    Brock, Kristian
    Altarrah, Khaled
    Moiemen, Naiem
    Affiliation
    University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; University of Birmingham
    Publication date
    2023-09-25
    Subject
    Surgery
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Introduction: Despite of recent advancement in the burns wound management, burn wound infection (BWI) is still one of the major cause of burns mortality. Patients who survive their burns injury still suffers from BWI related complication like delayed wound healing and poor scarring. BWI has been treated by application of topical antimicrobial agents or systemic antibiotics. Due to the global risk of developing systemic antibiotics resistance, medical research focuses on identifying single topical agent which has effective antimicrobial activity, easily available and cost effective. One such agent is acetic acid (AA). AA has been used as a topical antibacterial agent for the treatment of burns wounds for many years and has shown to have activity against gram-negative organisms including Pseudomonas aeruginosa. So far there has been no consensus on optimal concentration that has effective antimicrobial activity, frequency of application, duration of treatment and most importantly good patient's tolerability. A randomised control study is required to answer all these questions. Objective: To investigate the efficacy and tolerability of 0.5% and 2% of AA when applied to colonised burns wounds for 3 days after admittance to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham. Methods and analysis: This is a double-blinded, prospective, randomised, controlled, single-centre trial. Patients will be screened for eligibility in the inpatient area and those who are found to be eligible will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups: group 1: 0.5% AA (10 patients); group 2: 2% AA (10 patients); total number: 20 patients. Outcome measures: Primary outcome: Efficacy will be assessed by measuring the bacterial load from microbiology wound swabs for three consecutive days.Secondary outcomes: (1) The assessment of antimicrobial activity of AA and the minimum inhibitory concentrations. (2) Patient's tolerance by assessing Visual Analogue Scale pain score. (3) Time to 95% wound healing of treatment area. (4) Patient's perceived treatment allocation. Ethics and dissemination: AceticA trial protocol was approved by the National Research Ethics Service (West Midlands-Edgbaston Research Ethics Committee; 17/WM/0407; IRAS 234132). This article refers to protocol version 5.0 dated 6 July 2020. The analysed results will be presented at national and international conferences related to management of burn patients. The generated articles based on the trial results will be submitted to peer review journals for publication. Trial registration number: ISRCTN11636684.
    Citation
    Imran R, Hassouna T, Sur G, Casey A, Homer V, Barton D, Brock K, Altarrah K, Moiemen N. Efficacy and optimal dose of acetic acid to treat colonised burns wounds: protocol for a pilot randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open. 2023 Sep 25;13(9):e058006. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058006. PMID: 37748846; PMCID: PMC10533794.
    Type
    Article
    Handle
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14200/2550
    Additional Links
    http://bmjopen.bmj.com/
    DOI
    10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058006
    PMID
    37748846
    Journal
    BMJ Open
    Publisher
    BMJ Publishing Group
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058006
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    Burns and Plastics

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