Dehydrated Human Amnion Chorion Membrane as Treatment for Pediatric Burns
Author(s) -
Natasha Ahuja,
Richard M Jin,
Colin Powers,
Alexandria Billi,
Kathryn D. Bass
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advances in wound care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 2162-1934
pISSN - 2162-1918
DOI - 10.1089/wound.2019.0983
Subject(s) - medicine , muscle contracture , disfigurement , amnion , contracture , surgery , skin grafting , intensive care medicine , pregnancy , fetus , biology , genetics
Objective: Pediatric burns are a major source of injury and in the absence of adequate care can lead to lifelong functional loss and disfigurement. While split thickness skin autografts are the current standard of care for deep partial and full-thickness burns, this approach is associated with considerable morbidity. For this reason, alternative skin substitutes such as allografts have gained interest. Approach: In the present study, we present a case series of 30 children with various types of burns treated with dehydrated human amnion chorion membrane (dHACM). Results: We show that treatment with dHACM is associated with an excellent rate of healing comparable to split thickness skin grafts with less rate of hypertrophic scar and contracture. Innovation: Treatment with dHACM is particularly attractive as it consists of many tissue regenerative factors, such as growth factors and immune modulators, thus it will reduce the risk of scaring. Conclusion: While dHACM is associated with an increased upfront cost, treating patients with small to moderate-sized burns with dHACM in their regional centers works to decrease downstream costs such as management of prolonged pain from donor-site morbidity, revisional surgeries from scar and contractures of split thickness grafts, and avoiding the cost of transfer to higher level centers of care. Our findings challenge the current standard of care, suggesting that dHACM provides an alternative to the current use of split thickness skin grafting and is a safe, feasible, and potentially superior substitute for the management of small to moderate total body surface area partial and full-thickness pediatric burns.
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