Conference Coverage

Expert offers clinical pearls on leg ulcer therapy


 

FROM THE EADV CONGRESS

Punch grafting

This simple, cost-effective outpatient procedure was first described as a means of enhancing wound healing 150 years ago. The method involves utilizing a scalpel, curette, or punch to obtain a series of thin split-thickness skin grafts that contain epidermis and dermis down to the superficial papillary dermis. The grafts, usually harvested from the anterior thigh, are placed on the wound. This is followed by at least 5 days of local pressure and rest to promote graft uptake.

Sequential punch grafting is an excellent option for particularly challenging chronic ulcers, including Martorell hypertensive ischemic leg ulcers and other arteriolopathic ulcers in the elderly.

“Sequential punch grafting of wounds is very common in our clinics, especially for wounds that lack perfect grafting conditions,” Dr. Conde said.

She considers Martorell hypertensive ischemic leg ulcers to be underdiagnosed and undertreated. The Martorell leg ulcer is an exceedingly painful, rapidly progressive ischemic lesion, or bilateral lesions, with inflamed irregular margins. The disorder is caused by obstruction of subcutaneous arterioles in the absence of signs of vasculitis, and generally occurs in older individuals who have had well-controlled hypertension for many years. Diabetes, obesity, dyslipidemia, and peripheral artery disease are common comorbid conditions. The most common form of treatment – bioactive dressings in a moist environment – produces unsatisfactory results because it doesn’t address the inflammatory process.

Dr. Conde and coworkers have published the full details of how they achieved complete healing of Martorell hypertensive ischemic leg ulcers 3-8 weeks after punch grafting in three affected patients, all of whom presented with pain scores of 10/10 refractory even to opioid analgesics. The punch grafting was preceded by 15 days of topical corticosteroids and low-elasticity compression bandages in order to create adequate granulation tissue in the wound bed, which had the added benefit of achieving a 2- to 3-point reduction in pain scores even before the surgical procedure.

The pain-reducing effect of punch grafting isn’t as well appreciated as the wound-healing effect. Dr. Conde was first author of a recent study in which investigators systematically measured pain reduction in 136 patients with hard-to-heal leg ulcers of various etiologies treated with punch grafting. Nearly three-quarters of those who presented with painful ulcers were pain free after punch grafting, and the rest experienced greater than 70% pain reduction.

Pain suppression wasn’t dependent upon the percentage of graft uptake in this study. That’s because, as long as the wound isn’t overcleaned during dressing changes, even grafts that haven’t attached to the wound will release growth factors that promote wound healing, Dr. Conde explained.

Adjunctive negative pressure therapy

Portable vacuum-based negative pressure therapy devices are easy to use as a means to promote punch graft uptake. Negative pressure is best employed as an adjunct to punch grafting in suboptimal wound beds, longstanding ulcers, in patients with previous graft failure, or in challenging anatomic locations, such as the Achilles tendon or ankle. Dr. Conde has found the combination of punch grafting and negative pressure therapy especially helpful in patients with clinically inactive pyoderma gangrenosum.

Topical sevoflurane for analgesia

Most of the literature on topical sevoflurane for ulcer care has been published by Spanish researchers, but this form of analgesia deserves much more widespread use, according to Dr. Conde.

Sevoflurane is most often used as a gas in general anesthesia. In liquid form, however, it not only has a rapid, long-lasting analgesic effect when applied to painful leg ulcers, it also promotes healing because it is both antibacterial and a vasodilator. So before performing a potentially painful ulcer or wound cleaning, Dr. Conde recommended protecting perilesional skin with petroleum jelly, then irrigating the ulcer site with liquid sevoflurane. After that, it’s advisable to wait just 5-10 minutes before proceeding.

“It takes effect in much less time than EMLA cream,” she noted.

In one study of 30 adults aged over age 65 years with painful chronic venous ulcers refractory to conventional analgesics who underwent ulcer cleaning supported by topical sevoflurane at a dose of roughly 1 mL/cm2 of ulcer area every 2 days for a month, Spanish investigators documented onset of analgesic effect in 2-7 minutes, with a duration of 8-18 hours. The researchers found that the use of backup conventional analgesics ranging from acetaminophen to opioids was diminished. Side effects were limited to mild, transient itching and redness.

Dr. Conde reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding her presentation.

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