University of North Florida, Jacksonville, FL 32224-2673, USA.
J Athl Train. 2009 Sep-Oct;44(5):531-3. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-44.5.531.
REFERENCE/CITATION: Vermeulen H, van Hattem JM, Storm-Versloot MN, Ubbink DT. Topical silver for treating infected wounds. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007(1);CD005486.
What is the clinical evidence base for silver dressings in the management of contaminated and infected acute and chronic wounds?
Investigations were identified by Cochrane Wounds Group Specialized Register (2006), CENTRAL (2006), MEDLINE (2002-2006), EMBASE (2002-2006), CINAHL (2002-2006), and digital dissertations (2006) searches. Product manufacturers were contacted to identify additional eligible studies. The search terms included wound infection, surgical wound infection, ulcer, wound healing, and silver.
Each study fulfilled the following criteria: (1) The study was a randomized controlled trial of human participants that compared dressings containing silver with any dressings without silver, dressings with other antiseptics, or dressings with different dosages of silver. (2) The participants were aged 18 years and older with contaminated and infected open wounds of any cause. (3) The study had to evaluate the effectiveness of the dressings using an objective measure of healing. No language or publication status restrictions were imposed, and participants could be recruited in any care setting. Studies were excluded if the wounds were ostomies (surgically formed passages).
Study quality assessment was conducted independently by 3 authors using the Dutch Institute for Health Care Improvement and Dutch Cochrane Centre protocols. Characteristics of the study, participants, interventions, and outcome measures were extracted by one author and verified by a second using a standard form. The principal outcome measure was healing (time to complete healing, rate of change in wound area and volume, number and proportion of wounds healed within trial period). Secondary measures were adverse events (eg, pain, maceration, erythema), dressing leakage, and wound odor. Based on the unique comparisons in the studies, a meta-analysis was not conducted. As a result, summary estimates of treatment effect were calculated for each outcome comparison. RevMan software (version 4.2; Cochrane Centre, Oxford, United Kingdom) was used for statistical analysis.
Specific search criteria identified 31 studies for review, of which 3 met the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Lack of randomization and absence of wound infections excluded the majority of studies from the review. In the 3 studies selected, silver-containing dressings were compared with nonsilver dressings and dressings with other antimicrobials. One group used a silver-containing foam dressing and a nonsilver foam dressing; another group used a silver-containing alginate and a nonsilver alginate; and a third group used a silver-containing foam and various dressings (nonsilver foams, alginates, hydrocolloids, and gauze and other antimicrobial dressings). Sample sizes ranged between 99 and 619 participants. Most of the wounds in the included studies were pressure, diabetic, and venous leg ulcers. Wound infection was subjectively defined by 1 group as the presence of 2 or more signs and symptoms (eg, continuous pain, erythema, heat, or moderate to high levels of exudate) and by the other 2 groups as signs of critical colonization (eg, delayed healing, increased pain and exudate levels, discoloration, and odor). The primary measure in the included studies was healing outcome. The 3 groups used various assessments of healing, including relative and absolute reduction in wound area and number of wounds healed during the trial period. The trial period in each study was 4 weeks. In the 3 trials, the authors randomized the participants to the treatment groups. Examining healing, one group (129 participants) compared Contreet silver foam (Coloplast A/S, Humlebaek, Denmark) with Allevyn foam (Smith & Nephew, St-Laurent, Quebec, Canada). The authors reported no differences for rates of complete healing (risk difference [RD] = 0.00, 95% confidence interval [CI] = -0.09, 0.09) and median wound area reduction (weighted mean difference [WMD] = -0.30 cm(2), 95% CI = -2.92, 2.35). However, Contreet was favored over Allevyn (P = .034) for median relative reduction in wound area (WMD = -15.70 cm(2), 95% CI = -29.5, -1.90). One group (99 participants) compared Silvercel silver alginate (Johnson & Johnson Wound Management, Somerville, NJ) with Algosteril alginate (Johnson & Johnson Wound Management). The authors found no differences in rates of complete healing (RD = 0.00, 95% CI = -0.06, 0.05), mean absolute (WMD = 4.50 cm(2), 95% CI = -0.93, 9.93) and relative wound area reduction (WMD = -0.30 cm(2), 95% CI = -17.08, 16.48), or healing rate per day (week 1 to 4) (WMD = 0.16 cm(2), 95% CI = -0.03, 0.35). One group (619 participants) compared Contreet with various dressings (nonsilver foams, alginates, hydrocolloids, and gauze and other antimicrobial dressings). For median relative wound area reduction, the authors noted a superiority of Contreet over the various dressings (P = .0019). Examining secondary outcomes, 2 groups used subjective analysis to compare adverse reactions among the dressings. One group reported no difference between Contreet (in satellite ulcers, deterioration of periwound tissue) and Allevyn (in satellite ulcers, maceration, eczema) (RD = 0.02, 95% CI = -0.07, 0.12), and one group found no difference between Silvercel (in pain during dressing change, eczema, periwound erythema, maceration) and Algosteril (in pain during dressing change, eczema, erythema) (RD = -0.01, 95% CI = -0.12, 0.11). Two groups subjectively assessed leakage among silver and nonsilver dressings. The data from one group demonstrated superiority of Contreet over Allevyn (P = .002; RD = -0.30, 95% CI = -0.47, -0.13), and one group found Contreet better than various dressings (eg, nonsilver foams, alginates, hydrocolloids, and gauze, and other antimicrobial dressings) (P = .0005; RD = -0.11, 95% CI = -0.18, -0.05). Using a subjective 4-point scale, one group compared silver and nonsilver dressings and reported a difference favoring Contreet over Allevyn in terms of wound odor (P = .030; RD = -0.19, 95% CI = -0.36, -0.03).
Overall, this review provides no clear evidence to support the use of silver-containing foam and alginate dressings in the management of infected chronic wounds for up to 4 weeks. However, the use of silver foam dressings resulted in a greater reduction in wound size and more effective control of leakage and odor than did use of nonsilver dressings. Randomized controlled trials using standardized outcome measures and longer follow-up periods are needed to determine the most appropriate dressing for contaminated and infected acute and chronic wounds.
参考文献/引文:Vermeulen H, van Hattem JM, Storm-Versloot MN, Ubbink DT. 局部用银治疗感染创面。Cochrane 数据库系统评价。2007(1);CD005486.
在管理污染和感染的急性和慢性创面方面,含银敷料的临床证据基础是什么?
通过 Cochrane 伤口组特藏(2006 年)、CENTRAL(2006 年)、MEDLINE(2002-2006 年)、EMBASE(2002-2006 年)、CINAHL(2002-2006 年)和数字论文(2006 年)搜索确定了研究。与制造商联系以确定其他合格的研究。搜索词包括伤口感染、手术伤口感染、溃疡、伤口愈合和银。
每项研究均符合以下标准:(1)研究为人类参与者的随机对照试验,比较了含银敷料与任何不含银的敷料、含其他防腐剂的敷料或不同剂量银的敷料。(2)参与者年龄在 18 岁及以上,患有任何原因的污染和感染的开放性创面。(3)研究必须使用客观的愈合指标评估敷料的有效性。没有语言或发布状态限制,参与者可以在任何护理环境中招募。如果伤口是造口(经手术形成的通道),则排除研究。
3 名作者使用荷兰医疗保健改进研究所和荷兰 Cochrane 中心的方案独立进行研究质量评估。使用标准表格由一名作者提取研究、参与者、干预措施和结局测量的特征,并由第二名作者验证。主要结局测量是愈合(完全愈合时间、伤口面积和体积变化率、试验期间愈合的伤口数量和比例)。次要结局测量包括不良事件(如疼痛、糜烂、红斑)、敷料渗漏和伤口气味。由于研究中独特的比较,因此未进行荟萃分析。因此,为每个比较计算了治疗效果的汇总估计值。使用 RevMan 软件(版本 4.2;Cochrane 中心,英国牛津)进行统计分析。
具体搜索标准确定了 31 项需要审查的研究,其中 3 项符合纳入和排除标准。大多数研究因随机化和缺乏感染而被排除在综述之外。在选定的 3 项研究中,比较了含银敷料与非银敷料和含其他防腐剂的敷料。一组使用含银泡沫敷料和非银泡沫敷料;另一组使用含银藻酸盐和非银藻酸盐;第三组使用含银泡沫和各种敷料(非银泡沫、藻酸盐、水胶体和纱布及其他抗菌敷料)。样本量范围为 99 至 619 名参与者。纳入研究中的大多数伤口为压力性、糖尿病性和静脉性腿部溃疡。一个组将伤口感染主观定义为存在 2 个或更多个体征和症状(如持续疼痛、红斑、发热或中高水平渗出液),另两个组将其定义为临界定植(如愈合延迟、疼痛和渗出液水平增加、变色和气味)。纳入研究中的主要测量方法是愈合结果。3 组均使用各种评估愈合的方法,包括试验期间伤口面积和愈合的伤口数量的相对和绝对减少。每个研究的试验期为 4 周。在 3 项试验中,作者将参与者随机分配到治疗组。在评估愈合方面,一组(129 名参与者)将 Contreet 银泡沫(Coloplast A/S,Humlebaek,丹麦)与 Allevyn 泡沫(Smith & Nephew,St-Laurent,魁北克,加拿大)进行比较。作者报告两组之间完全愈合率(风险差异[RD]=0.00,95%置信区间[CI]=-0.09,0.09)和中位伤口面积减少率(加权均数差异[WMD]=-0.30 cm2,95% CI=-2.92,2.35)无差异。然而,Contreet 比 Allevyn(P=0.034)更有利于中位相对伤口面积减少率(WMD=-15.70 cm2,95% CI=-29.5,-1.90)。一组(99 名参与者)将 Silvercel 银藻酸盐(Johnson & Johnson Wound Management,Somerville,NJ)与 Algosteril 藻酸盐(Johnson & Johnson Wound Management)进行比较。作者发现两组之间完全愈合率(RD=0.00,95% CI=-0.06,0.05)、平均绝对(WMD=4.50 cm2,95% CI=-0.93,9.93)和相对伤口面积减少率(WMD=-0.30 cm2,95% CI=-17.08,16.48)或愈合率(第 1 周到第 4 周)(WMD=0.16 cm2,95% CI=0.03,0.35)无差异。一组(619 名参与者)将 Contreet 与各种敷料(非银泡沫、藻酸盐、水胶体和纱布及其他抗菌敷料)进行比较。对于中位相对伤口面积减少率,作者指出 Contreet 优于各种敷料(P=0.0019)。对 2 组次要结局进行评估,使用主观分析比较敷料之间的不良反应。一组报告 Contreet(在卫星溃疡、围伤口组织恶化)和 Allevyn(在卫星溃疡、糜烂、湿疹)之间无差异(RD=0.02,95% CI=-0.07,0.12),一组发现 Silvercel(在敷料更换时疼痛、湿疹、围伤口红斑、糜烂)和 Algosteril(在敷料更换时疼痛、湿疹、红斑、糜烂)之间无差异(RD=-0.01,95% CI=-0.12,0.11)。两组主观评估银和非银敷料的渗漏情况。一组的数据表明 Contreet 优于 Allevyn(P=0.002;RD=-0.30,95% CI=-0.47,-0.13),一组发现 Contreet 优于各种敷料(如非银泡沫、藻酸盐、水胶体、纱布和其他抗菌敷料)(P=0.0005;RD=-0.11,95% CI=-0.18,-0.05)。使用主观 4 分制,一组比较了银和非银敷料,并报告说 Contreet 比 Allevyn 在伤口气味方面具有优势(P=0.030;RD=-0.19,95% CI=-0.36,-0.03)。
总的来说,本综述没有明确证据支持在管理污染和感染的慢性伤口时使用含银泡沫和藻酸盐敷料,最长可达 4 周。然而,与使用非银敷料相比,使用银泡沫敷料可更大程度地减少伤口面积,并更有效地控制渗漏和气味。需要使用标准化结局测量和更长随访期的随机对照试验来确定最适合污染和感染的急性和慢性创面的敷料。