Botulinum Toxin A in the treatment of frostbite sequelae–results from a blinded, early-phase, comparative trial
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30522Dato
2023-03-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Norheim, Arne Johan; Borud, Einar Kristian; Mercer, James; de Weerd, Louis; Weiss, Thomas; Wilsgaard, TomSammendrag
Introduction: Freezing Cold Injuries (FCI) have been associated with long-term sequelae including
vasospasm. The aims of the pilot study are to explore the research methodology and investigate
the tolerability and safety of treatment with Botulinum Toxin-A (BTX-A) in FCI Sequelae.
Methodology: This pilot study tests the logistics, the treatment setting and the follow-up
procedure in an early-phase, double-blinded, randomized, controlled trial study-design. The
variables in the study were subjective symptoms, peripheral micro-vascularization/rewarming,
somatosensory responsiveness, and generic measure of health status.
Results: No major challenges or difficulties were noticed according to the protocol or the
study methodology. The monitoring of tolerability and safety of treatment with BTX-A did not
reveal any major unwanted and/or adverse reactions among the patients in the pilot study and
no challenges occurred during data collection of endpoints. The study revealed an inaccuracy of
the 2nd degree FCI diagnosis and uncover a need for relevant and sufficient clinical information
for FCI classification.
Conclusions: This pilot study showed the study methodology with minor adjustments is
feasible in a future full-scale clinical trial. The recruitment process needs to be more refined to
ensure that the eligible study participants are a homogenous group of FCI patients.
Forlag
Taylor & FrancisSitering
Norheim, Borud, Mercer, de Weerd, Weiss, Wilsgaard. Botulinum Toxin A in the treatment of frostbite sequelae–results from a blinded, early-phase, comparative trial. International Journal of Circumpolar Health. 2023;82:1-10Metadata
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