Identification of High-Risk Lower Extremity Wounds Using Point-of-Care Test for Bacterial Protease Activity; A Single-Centre, Single-Blinded, Prospective Study

Author:

Jonker Leon12ORCID,Todhunter Jane3,Mutch Rachel4,Lowes Donna5,Messenger Grace6

Affiliation:

1. Science Manager, North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS FT, Carlisle, UK

2. Visiting Professor, University of Cumbria, Carlisle, UK

3. Specialist Vascular Nurse, North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS FT, Carlisle, UK

4. Research Nurse, North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS FT, Whitehaven, UK

5. Research Practitioner, North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS FT, Carlisle, UK

6. Lead Podiatrist, North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS FT, Carlisle, UK

Abstract

Clinician observation is the mainstay to determine if wound infection is present, and focuses on presence of erythema, purulence, and odour. However, non-visible bacterial protease activity can delay wound healing and lead to complications. In this study, a point-of-care test to detect the presence of bacterial protease activity (BPA, tested with Woundchek Bacterial Status test) was appraised. A total of 130 patients with lower extremity wounds were recruited in vascular and podiatry clinics, and across two time-points 182 BPA tests were conducted subsequent to initial (blinded) clinician's wound appraisal. Clinical opinion (‘no infection’, ‘possible’ or ‘definite’ infection) and BPA result (negative or positive test) had a moderate Kendall's tau-c rank correlation coefficient of 0.32 ( P < 0.001). Binary logistic regression analysis and principal component analysis showed that infection determined by clinical opinion was significantly associated with abovementioned clinical signs and a positive BPA test. However, a positive BPA result was also significantly linked with wound severity, such as number of lesions, chronicity and size. Throughout a 12-week follow-up period, median ulcer size was larger for wounds positive for BPA test at baseline ( P 0.001) and week-12 ( P 0.036; both Mann-Whitney U-test) respectively. As a pilot initiative, clinical staff were allowed to act on the BPA result if they wished; in 11 out of 71 test-positive cases (15%) this happened and antimicrobial dressing was applied instead of planned standard dressing. These results show that protease-releasing bacteria may be active in ulcers that do not (yet) exhibit hallmark signs of infection, and are associated with delayed healing. Targeted point-of-care testing for bacterial protease activity may have the potential to identify and enable pro-active (antimicrobial) management of these high-risk wounds.

Funder

Woundchek Laboratories

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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