4.6 Article

Silicone adhesive multilayer foam dressings as adjuvant prophylactic therapy to prevent hospital-acquired pressure ulcers: a pragmatic noncommercial multicentre randomized open-label parallel-group medical device trial

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY
Volume 185, Issue 1, Pages 52-61

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bjd.19689

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Funding

  1. Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre (KCE) [KCE16012]

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The study demonstrates that silicone foam dressings can effectively reduce the incidence of category 2 or worse PUs in hospitalized at-risk patients, especially for sacral areas. No statistical difference was found for the heel and trochanter areas.
Background Silicone adhesive multilayer foam dressings are used as adjuvant therapy to prevent hospital-acquired pressure ulcers (PUs). Objectives To determine whether silicone foam dressings in addition to standard prevention reduce the incidence of PUs of category 2 or worse compared with standard prevention alone. Methods This was a multicentre, randomized controlled medical device trial conducted in eight Belgian hospitals. At-risk adult patients were centrally randomized (n = 1633) to study groups based on a 1 : 1 : 1 allocation: experimental groups 1 (n = 542) and 2 (n = 545) - pooled as the treatment group - and the control group (n = 546). The experimental groups received PU prevention according to hospital protocol, and a silicone foam dressing on the relevant body sites. The control group received standard of care. The primary endpoint was the incidence of a new PU of category 2 or worse at the studied body sites. Results In the intention-to-treat population (n = 1605), PUs of category 2 or worse occurred in 4 center dot 0% of patients in the treatment group and 6 center dot 3% in the control group [relative risk (RR) 0 center dot 64, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0 center dot 41-0 center dot 99, P = 0 center dot 04]. Sacral PUs were observed in 2 center dot 8% and 4 center dot 8% of the patients in the treatment group and the control group, respectively (RR 0 center dot 59, 95% CI 0 center dot 35-0 center dot 98, P = 0 center dot 04). Heel PUs occurred in 1 center dot 4% and 1 center dot 9% of patients in the treatment and control groups, respectively (RR 0 center dot 76, 95% CI 0 center dot 34-1 center dot 68, P = 0 center dot 49). Conclusions Silicone foam dressings reduce the incidence of PUs of category 2 or worse in hospitalized at-risk patients when used in addition to standard of care. The results show a decrease for the sacrum, but no statistical difference for the heel and trochanter areas.

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