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NCT07706608

DRONE-WOUND Study: Severe Infection After Drone-Related Combat Trauma

Sponsor: Ukrainian Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Therapy

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Drone-related combat injuries have become one of the most devastating mechanisms of injury in modern warfare. These injuries often cause extensive tissue devitalization, contamination, open fractures, vascular injuries, and complex soft tissue damage, which may substantially increase the risk of severe wound infection, multidrug-resistant bacterial infection, repeated surgical procedures, limb loss, and sepsis. However, the relationship between the extent of tissue devitalization and the development of severe infection has not been systematically investigated. The DRONE-WOUND Study is a prospective observational cohort study designed to evaluate the association between tissue devitalization and severe wound infection in patients with drone-related combat trauma. The study will collect detailed clinical, surgical, microbiological, and radiological data from injured patients treated at participating trauma centers. Measures of tissue injury, contamination, surgical management, microbiological findings, and infection outcomes will be analyzed to identify factors associated with severe infection and poor clinical outcomes. The findings of this study are expected to improve understanding of the mechanisms leading to infection after drone-related injuries, support early identification of high-risk patients, and inform future strategies for surgical management, antimicrobial therapy, and infection prevention in combat trauma. Ultimately, the study aims to improve limb salvage, reduce infectious complications, and enhance outcomes for patients with severe drone-related injuries.

Official title: DRONE-WOUND Study: Tissue Devitalization and Severe Infection Following Drone-Related Combat Trauma: A Prospective Multicenter Observational Cohort Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 60 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

500

Start Date

2026-10-23

Completion Date

2026-10-23

Last Updated

2026-07-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Locations (1)

Vinnitsya university hospital

Vinnytsia, Vinnitsa, Ukraine