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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2006 Nov-Dec;19(6):383-90.
doi: 10.1111/j.1529-8019.2006.00096.x.

Wound bed score and its correlation with healing of chronic wounds

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Wound bed score and its correlation with healing of chronic wounds

Vincent Falanga et al. Dermatol Ther. 2006 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

Adequate wound bed preparation is essential for healing of leg ulcers, and consists of controlling exudate and edema, decreasing the bacterial burden, promoting healthy granulation tissue, and removing necrotic tissue. Currently, there is no classification system for wound bed preparation that has predictive value. Based on past work and the authors' experience, we have now developed and tested a new classification system that scores the following parameters: healing edges (wound edge effect), presence of eschar, greatest wound depth/granulation tissue, amount of exudate amount, edema, peri-wound dermatitis, peri-wound callus and or fibrosis, and a pink/red wound bed. Each parameter receives a score from 0 (worst score) to 2 (best score), and all the parameter scores are added for a total score. Each wound can have a maximum score of 16 (the best score possible), to a minimum score of 0 (the worst score possible). We used this wound bed score (WBS) system in a study of 177 patients with venous ulcers who had been prospectively treated with and randomized to either conventional therapy (compression alone) or a living bilayered skin construct (BSC). We evaluated serial photographs at baseline to determine whether the results would be predictive of complete wound closure and could validate the WBS. We found that wounds that ultimately achieved full closure had a statistically significant higher WBS than those that did not heal (p = 0.0012). This was also true when separating wounds by treatment modality: standard therapy (p = 0.044) and treatment with a BSC (p = 0.011). When dividing the WBS in the following quartile groups: scores 4-10, 10-12, 12-13, and 13-16, the percentage of healed wounds correlated with the WBS (p = 0.0008). For all wounds, a one unit increase in total WBS resulted on average in a 22.8% increase in odds of healing (OR = 1.228). This WBS seems to have validity in predicting complete wound closure in wounds treated with either standard therapy or advanced modalities, such as BSC. If confirmed and widely adopted in this and other types of wounds, it could be a useful tool in both the clinical and research setting.

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