Cover of Negative pressure wound therapy for wounds healing by primary intention

Negative pressure wound therapy for wounds healing by primary intention1

IQWiG Reports – Commission No. N17-01B

Authors

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© IQWiG (Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care)
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Key statement

Research question:

The objective of this investigation is to

  • assess the benefit of negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) in comparison with standard wound therapy
in patients with wounds healing by primary intention with regard to patient-relevant outcomes.

The benefit assessment of NPWT in patients with wounds healing by secondary intention was conducted as part of project N17-01A.

Conclusions:

A total of 45 studies supplied usable results on patient-relevant outcomes. Most studies were on postoperative wounds in endoprosthetics, obstetrics (Caesarean section), abdominal and cardiovascular surgery. The majority of studies were done on wounds with an elevated risk of impaired wound healing. No results whatsoever were available on a relevant number of further studies (23% data gap); hence, the certainty of conclusions was downgraded to account for potential publication bias.

With regard to the outcome for wound closure, there was a hint of greater benefit of NPWT in comparison with standard wound therapy in wounds healing by primary intention. The analyses additionally revealed an indication of greater benefit of NPWT in terms of avoiding wound infection in wounds healing by primary intention. For the remaining outcomes (particularly mortality, total rate of complications, pain, length of hospital stay, and health-related quality of life), there were no hints of benefit or harm of NPWT.

Keywords:

Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy, Wound Healing, Benefit Assessment, Systematic Review, Publication Bias