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RECRUITING
NCT06150326
NA

Medical Honey for Wound Treatment in Intensive Care. (MICARéa) Randomized, Controlled, Single-center Pilot Study.

Sponsor: University Hospital, Angers

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Wound management is a real public health issue in France. To date, a wide range of devices exists to treat these wounds, depending on their nature and stage of evolution. Honey has been proposed for the care of wounds and is effective in reducing the surface of wounds and the pain perceived by patients. Inanition, its use is very simple compared to usual care, requiring different types of dressing accross time. In the intensive care unit, patients are prone to suffering or developing numerous types of wound, but the interest of honey has not been investigated yet. We propose a prospective, monocentric, randomized, single-blind, controlled clinical trial to assess the efficacy of managing acute cutaneous wounds with honey (Activon®) compared with standard care, in intensive care patients. The primary endpoint is the percentage of wound surface area reduction measured at 15 days from inclusion.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2024-06-11

Completion Date

2028-04

Last Updated

2026-04-06

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

medical honey Activon® 25g Tube

no blinding procedures will be set up for the adminisration of the treatement

DEVICE

standard of care

no blinding procedures will be set up for the adminisration of the treatement

Locations (1)

Angers University Hospital, surgical reanimation

Angers, France