Active treatment of non-healing wounds in the community: Identifying people at risk of non-healing wounds

24 8月 2023
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      Non-healing wounds are common, have a negative impact on patients, increase workload for clinicians and are a source of rising costs for the NHS. Early identification of people who are at risk of non-healing is important to ensure best practice interventions including the use of active treatments. This article will discuss best practice recommendations from the new Wounds UK Best Practice Statement (BPS; Wounds UK, 2022) with a focus on patient assessment and identification of risk factors for non-healing wounds, as well as examples of early intervention with active treatments to improve patient outcomes.

KEY WORDS

Best Practice Statement Non-healing wounds Patient assessment Risk factors

DR CAROLINE DOWSETT Clinical Nurse Specialist Tissue Viability, East London NHS Foundation Trust and Independent Nurse Consultant Wound Care.

This article and the best practice statement were sponsored by Smith+Nephew. The views presented in this document are the work of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Smith+Nephew.

      Non-healing wounds have a negative impact on patient’s quality of life, are costly to treat and increase the workload for clinicians, particularly in the community setting, where the majority of them are managed. This is a growing concern as the number of people who suffer from a wound has increased, with a 71% increase in the annual prevalence of wounds between 2012/2013 and 2017/2018 (Guest et al, 2020). Thirty per cent of all wounds are unhealing and it is these wounds that disproportionately represent 67% of the total wound expenditure. Non-healing wounds are more likely to develop complications, such as infection, necessitating more costly interventions and more frequent dressing changes, placing greater demands on available resources (Dowsett, 2015). Wound complications are associated with more intensive treatment, longer hospital stays, readmission and specialist medical or surgical intervention. There is considerable scope for improvement in the care and outcomes of these patients through early identification of a wound that is non-healing and intervention with active treatments.

FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH NONHEALING

      Inequalities and variations in care are often contributing factors to non-healing wounds. In one study, 30% of wounds lacked a differential diagnosis and only 16% of cases with leg or foot ulcers had a Doppler ankle brachial pressure index recorded (Guest et al, 2015). Treating the underlying aetiology is a critical factor for wound healing. Gray et al (2018) found that 31% of patients who had a venous leg ulcer were not receiving compression therapy and healing rates for venous leg ulcers are only 47% at 12 months (Guest et al, 2017).

      Other factors that contribute to a non-healing wound include patient-related factors, such as underlying pathology and comorbidities, woundrelated factors including ulcer size, duration and location, as well as organisation-related factors, such as the knowledge and skill of the clinician and availability and accessibility of treatments [Table 1].

 

      Non-healing wounds require a careful assessment and reassessment of both the patient and the wound, as well as a review of care systems to identify and address both intrinsic and extrinsic barriers to healing. It is also important to consider which factors can be easily modified, are slow to be modified, or cannot be modified so that implementation of local and systemic care delivery offers patients improved but realistic outcomes (Wounds UK, 2022).

PATIENT ASSESSMENT

      The purpose of holistic patient assessment is to ensure that the patient receives the most appropriate treatment in line with best practice. The key principles for effective care of a patient with a wound include:

Assessment and diagnosis of wound aetiology with accurate documentation

Accurate treatment planning

Aetiology-specific patient care/interventions (e.g. offloading, compression, metabolic control)

Aetiology-specific wound care (e.g. cleansing, debriding, dressing/therapy selection)

Understanding the importance of healing rates, which may require ‘aetiology-specific’ monitoring to inform service provision and quality improvement

Collaborative work to improve patient outcomes and service delivery (Wounds UK, 2022).

      There are many opportunities for the clinician to identify that the wound is non-healing during assessment and reassessment and interactions with patients and their advocates. Some wounds will be identified as ‘at risk’ of non-healing from day one of care based on initial assessment, while others may fail to achieve sufficient healing after 2-4 weeks of standard care.

      Changes in wound size are frequently used to track the progress of wound healing. After 4 weeks of optimal treatment, the percentage reduction in wound area may provide useful information on the likelihood of healing. A venous leg ulcer or pressure ulcer that has not reduced in area by 40% (or by 50% for a diabetic foot ulcer) after 4 weeks of optimal treatment is unlikely to heal (Kantor and Margolis, 2000; Phillips et al, 2000; Snyder et al, 2010; Gwilym et al, 2022). Changes in wound size, however, should not be used as the sole indicator of wound improvement and healing. Along with clinical observation of the wound bed composition, patient comorbidities and risk factors for non-healing, talking and listening to the patient can help to gauge wound progression and implement appropriate actions (Wounds UK, 2022).

      The earlier the wound is identified as non-healing or potential for non-healing and the patient is escalated for active treatment, the more likely the  wound will heal in a realistic time scale.

ACTIVE TREATMENTS

      While passive wound dressings simply serve a protective function, active dressings, such as singleuse negative pressure wound therapy (sNPWT), not only create a moist wound healing environment, but also interact with wound bed components to further enhance and improve wound healing.

      Over the past decade, health technology has begun to transform healthcare, with the introduction of active wound dressings and devices, as well as technology-based approaches such as telehealth. Active treatment assumes that the differential diagnosis is correct and that standard treatment including cleansing and debridement has been performed.

      A number of active treatments are available for patients who have been identified as having a nonhealing wound (Box 1). However not all of these are available in the community, and some patients may require referral to a specialist to access these. Many patients with non-healing wounds may require more than one active treatment to progress the wound to healing, for example, debridement with larval therapy and progression to healing with negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT).

   Pathways of care and recommended treatment plans are effective strategies for guiding the use of active treatments for non-healing wounds (Figure 1) and ensuring appropriate resource use. They can also help to avoid delays in escalation of care and stepping up to active treatments without waiting for specialist input and review, which is especially important for patients who are identified as nonhealing on the first day of assessment. There is growing evidence that in some cases, using active treatments such as sNPWT earlier in the patient's care plan can result in better outcomes than waiting for the wound to potentially deteriorate and become more difficult to treat and heal (Dowsett et al, 2017; Hampton et al, 2022). Active treatments, such as NPWT, have increasingly become easier to use and more readily available in the community setting, and while they may have a higher initial cost if used correctly, they can reduce overall cost and healing time (Hampton et al, 2022).

   

TREATMENT PLAN FOR NON-HEALING WOUNDS

      Improving community wound care requires active treatments to be available at the point of care and for community clinicians to be confident and competent in their use. Training and education, as well as ongoing support in determining when to step up and step down from active treatments, are critical for success. Reassessment and review at 7 and 14 days to determine the impact of using active treatments can support decision-making for when to continue treatment or revert to standard care.

     The following case studies provide examples of using active treatment (sNPWT) to treat 2 patients with non-healing wounds. The complexity of the patient and the wound will determine the time it takes for active treatments to impact wound healing and should be taken into consideration as part of the treatment plan.

CONCLUSION

      There is considerable scope for improvement in the care and outcomes of patients with non-healing wounds. Through accurate and detailed patient and wound assessment, early identification of a wound that is unlikely to heal with standard care is essential for escalation of care to active treatments. Wounds that appear to be moving away from a normal healing trajectory despite receiving optimal care, including active treatment, should be, as part of best practice, referred to a healthcare practitioner with specialist skills to ensure the best clinical outcomes for the patient (Shamsian, 2021). Patient response to active treatments such as sNPWT can vary depending on the patient's underlying health condition, wound aetiology, wound duration and associated complications. Implementing the BPS (Wounds UK, 2022) recommendations on active treatment of non-healing wounds in the community has the potential to improve patient outcomes and reduce the time clinicians spend caring for these patients and overall costs of care.

REFERENCES

1. Dowsett C (2015) Breaking the cycle of hard-to-heal wounds: balancing cost and care. Wounds International 6(2) 17-21

2. Dowsett C, Hampton J, Myers D, Styche T (2017) Use of PICOTM to improve clinical and economic outcomes in hard-to-heal wounds. Wounds International 8(2): 52–59

3. Gethin G, Touriany E, van Netten JJ et al (2022a) The impact of patient health and lifestyle factors on wound healing, Part 1: Stress, sleep, smoking, alcohol, common medications and illicit drug use.Wound Management 23(1 Suppl 1, pt 1): S1–41

4. Gethin G, van Netten JJ, Probst S et al (2022b) The impact of patient health and lifestyle factors on wound healing, Part 2: Physical activity and nutrition. J Wound Management 23(1 Suppl 1, pt 2): S1–24

5. Gray TA, Rhodes S, Atkinson RA et al (2018) Opportunities for better value wound care: a multiservice, cross-sectional survey of complex wounds and their care in a UK community population. Available at: https:// bmjopen.bmj.com/content/8/3/e019440

6. Guest JF, Ayoub N, McIlwraith T et al (2015) Health economic burden that wounds impose on the National Health Service in the UK. BMJ Open 5:e009283. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009283

7. Guest JF, Ayoub N, Mcilwraith T et al (2017) Health economic burden that different wound types impose on the UK's National Health Service. Int  Wound J 14(2):322–30. https://doi.org/10.1111/

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8. Guest JF, Fuller GW, Vowden P (2020) Cohort study evaluating the burden of wounds to the UK’s National Health Service in 2017/2018: update from 2012/2013. BMJ Open 10(12):e045253. https://doi. org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045253

9. Gwilym BL, Mazumdar E, Naik G et al (2022) Initial Reduction in Ulcer Size as a Prognostic Indicator for Complete Wound Healing: A Systematic Review of Diabetic Foot and Venous Leg Ulcers. Adv Wound Care 12(6): 327-338

10. Hampton J, Meagher H, Sharpe A et al (2022) multi-centre international practice-based evidence using PICOTM single-use negative pressure wound therapy: challenging current behaviours in wound care practice. Wounds International 13(2): 46–53

11. Kantor J, Margolis DJ (2000) A multicentre study of percentage change in venous leg ulcer area as a prognostic index of healing at 24 weeks. Br J Dermatol 142(5): 960–4

12. Phillips TJ, Machado F, Trout R et al (2000) Prognostic indicators in venous ulcers. J Am Acad Dermatol 43(4): 627–30

13. Shamsian N (2021) Wound bed preparation: An overview Br J Community Nurs 26(Sup9): S6–S11

14. Snyder RJ, Cardinal M, Dauphinée DM, Stavosky J (2010) A posthoc analysis of reduction in diabetic foot ulcer size at 4 weeks as a predictor of healing by 12 weeks. Ostomy Wound Manage 56(3): 44–50

15. Vowden P (2011) Hard-to-heal wounds made easy. Wounds International 4: 1-6

16. Wounds UK (2018) Best Practice Statement: Improving holistic assessment of chronic wounds. Wounds UK

17. Wounds UK (2022) Best Practice Statement: Active treatment of nonhealing wounds in the community. Wounds UK

This article is excerpted from the Wounds UK | Vol 19 | No 2 | 2023 by Wound World.

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