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Clinical Research Poster

Routine Assessment of Chronic Wounds with a New Handheld Imaging Device Can Efficiently Incorporate Wound Size and Bacteria Fluorescence Information at the Point-of-care: A 50-patient Clinical Trial

Introduction. Real-time knowledge of wound size and bacterial status during routine wound assessment could facilitate more rapid treatment decision making.

Objective. A handheld imaging device with wound measurement and bacterial fluorescence detection capabilities was evaluated as part of a clinical trial (#NCT03754426).

Materials and Methods. Fifty wounds (36 diabetic foot ulcers [DFUs], 4 venous leg ulcers [VLUs], 3 arterial ulcers, and 7 other types) were imaged. Two wound measurement stickers were placed around the wound for calibration and a standard photo was taken, from which the device measurement software recorded wound area (cm2) as well as the maximum length and width of the wound. Then, stickers were removed and the room was made dark. The device’s safe violet light was used to illuminate the wound for fluorescence imaging. Wounds exhibiting red/pink/blush or cyan fluorescence were considered bacterial fluorescence positive and swab cultures were obtained for validation.

Results. Capturing images required about 1 minute of time. Of the 50 wounds, 48 (96%) were easily measured using the device software. The remaining 2 wounds failed to measure due to inappropriate sticker placement, preventing sticker detection. The average wound area, based on wound circumference, was 5.1 cm2 (range, 0.3 cm2– 43.4 cm2). In contrast, computing wound area based on conventional maximum length and width calculations resulted in a 70% overestimation compared with circumference-based measurements. There were 36 wounds (72%) positive for red/pink/blush or cyan fluorescence. Cultures confirmed that red/pink/blush and cyan on fluorescence images was associated with moderate-to-heavy bacterial loads. Predominant species included Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Conclusions. The handheld wound imaging device immediately documented wound area, length, width, and presence and location(s) of bacterial fluorescence across diverse wound types. Microbiological cultures confirmed bacterial status about 3 days later. Results suggest easy incorporation of this technology into routine wound assessments, providing real-time wound size and bacterial information for documentation that could assist clinicians during routine wound care.

 

 

Citation: Teene L, Fedorov S, Jones LM, Rennie MY, Tapang K, Linden R. Routine assessment of chronic wounds with a new handheld imaging device can efficiently incorporate wound size and bacteria fluorescence information at the point-of-care: a 50-patient clinical trial. Poster presented at: Symposium on Advanced Wound Care Spring; May 7-11, 2019; San Antonio, TX.

Products: MolecuLight i:X Wound Imaging Device (MolecuLight, Toronto, ON, Canada)

Sponsor: MolecuLight, Toronto, ON, Canada

IRB: Veritas IRB


This abstract was not subject to the WOUNDS® peer-review process.


Interested in seeing more posters exhibited at SAWC Spring 2019? Register for the conference and attend the Poster Gala on Thursday, May 9!

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