Wound repair and regeneration : official publication of the Wound Healing Society [and] the European Tissue Repair Society
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Complex stalled wounds feature an alkaline milieu that favors tissue destruction and microbial growth. The presence of bacteria in turn perpetuates the inflammatory response. However, only limited knowledge exists of pH dependency on the antibacterial efficacy of polyhexamethylene biguanide (PHMB) or the influence of surfactants or delivery vehicle used in antiseptic formulations. ⋯ Undecylenamidopropyl betaine was found to lower the antimicrobial activity of polihexanide in the co-culture system, while macrogolum and the biocellulose increased polihexanide efficiency to reduce Staphylococcus aureus especially in the presence of serum. The increasing antibacterial efficacy of PHMB with rising pH was not altered by undecylenamidopropyl betaine, macrogolum, or the biocellulose. The results suggest that application of PHMB with macrogolum or by delivery through a biocellulose dressing might be advantageous for management of wound infections.
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The disparity between ideal evidence from randomized controlled trials and real-world evidence in medical research has prompted the United States Food and Drug Administration to consider the use of real-world data to better understand safety and effectiveness of new devices for a broader patient population and to prioritize real-world data in regulatory decision making. As the healthcare system transitions from volume- to value-based care, there is a growing need to harness the power of real-world data to change the paradigm for wound care clinical research and enable more generalizable clinical trials. ⋯ The common definitional framework of the purpose-built electronic health record and the 21 wound-specific quality measures help to standardize the potential sources of bias in real-world data, making the consortium data useful for comparative effectiveness research. This consortium can transform wound care clinical research and raise the standards of care, while helping physicians achieve success with the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System.