THIS INFORMATION IS INTENDED FOR HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONALS ONLY
Medihoney™ Research and Clinical Product Information.
Through International Clinical Research on our unique Medihoney™ products, Medihoney™ is helping to provide better solutions for wound and skin care.

Clinical trials are being conducted to further investigate the use of Medihoney™ products for a range of indications including infection control, paediatric wound care, maxillofacial surgery and peritoneal dialysis exit-sites.

Medihoney™ actively supports clinical research carried out by leading institutions around the world.

Medihoney™ Research References

Medihoney Randomised Control Trials
Summary of the latest RCTs utlizing Medihoney

List of current or completed clinical trials where Medihoney™ Pty Ltd is the sponsor or provides product to the trial:

Prevention of Catheter Associated Infections
A randomized, controlled trial of topical exit site application of Honey (Medihoney™) versus Mupirocin™ for the prevention of catheter associated infections in Haemodialysis patients.

Brisbane, Australia

    * 101 patients enrolled, who were receiving hemodialysis via tunneled, cuffed central venous  catheters
    * Comparing effect of thrice-weekly exit-site application of Medihoney™ Antibacterial Medical Honey™ versus Mupirocin™ on infection rates in patients
    * Thrice-weekly application of standardized antibacterial honey to hemodialysis catheter exit sites was safe, cheap, and effective
    * Resulted in a comparable rate of catheter-associated infection to that obtained with Mupirocin™
    * Completed. Publication: Journal of American Society of Nephrology


Tolerance of Medihoney™
Patient acceptability and tolerance of Medihoney™ in the management of non-healing leg ulcers.

United Kingdom
• 40 patients with ulcers resistant to eight weeks of compression
Medihoney™ Antibacterial Medical Honey™ dressings instead of their previous dressings for a 12 week period
• Effect on Ulcer pain and size decreased
• Effect on malodour
• Impact on patient satisfaction with the honey treatment regime
• Completed. Publication: Journal of Wound Care May 2004.





A randomized, controlled trial of exit site application of Medihoney™ Antibacterial Wound Gel™ for the prevention of catheter-associated infections in peritoneal dialysis patients

Objectives: The primary objective of this study is to determine whether daily exit-site application of standardized antibacterial honey (Medihoney Antibacterial Wound Gel;
Comvita, Te Puke, New Zealand) results in a reduced risk of catheter-associated infections in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients compared with standard topical mupirocin prophylaxis of nasal staphylococcal carriers.
Design: Multicenter, prospective, open label, randomized controlled trial.
Setting: PD units throughout Australia and New Zealand.
Participants: The study will include both incident and prevalent PD patients (adults and children) for whom informed consent can be provided. Patients will be excluded if they have had (1) a history of psychological illness or condition that interferes with their ability to understand or comply with the requirements of the study; (2) recent (within 1 month) exit-site infection, peritonitis, or tunnel infection; (3) known hypersensitivity to, or intolerance of, honey or mupirocin; (4) current or recent (within 4 weeks) treatment with an antibiotic administered by any route; or (5) nasal carriage of mupirocin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
Methods: 370 subjects will be randomized 1:1 to receive either daily topical exit-site application of Medihoney Antibacterial Wound Gel (all patients) or nasal application of mupirocin if staphylococcal nasal carriage is demonstrated. All patients in the control and intervention groups will perform their usual exit-site care according to local practice. The study will continue until 12 months after the last patient is recruited (anticipated recruitment time is 24 months).
Main Outcome Measures: The primary outcome measure will be time to first episode of exit-site infection, tunnel infection, or peritonitis, whichever comes first. Secondary outcome measures will include time to first exit-site infection, time to first tunnel infection, time to first peritonitis, time to infection-associated catheter removal,catheter-associated infection rates, causative organisms, incidence of mupirocin-resistant microbial isolates, and other adverse reactions.
Conclusions: This multicenter Australian and New Zealand study has been designed to provide evidence to help nephrologists and their PD patients determine the optimal strategy for preventing PD catheter-associated infections. Demonstration of a significant improvement in PD catheterassociated infections with topical Medihoney will provide clinicians with an important new prophylactic strategy with a low propensity for promoting antimicrobial resistance.

Reference: Johnson D.W. et al. (2009)  The Honeypot Study Protocol: A randomized controlled trial of exit-site application of Medihoney Antibacterial Wound Gel for the prevention of catheter-associated infections in peritoneal dialysis patients. Perit Dial Int. 29(3): 303-309






Wound care in paediatric patients: Use of Medihoney™ products for antisepsis and to accelerate healing.

A database has been developed to offer a standardised internet base documentation tool for baseline data with high clinical relevance to evaluate and promote the use of Medihoney™ product in paediatric (<18yrs) wound care.

Setting: Bonn University Hospital, Germany  (Multicenter, prospective study across 15 sites)

References:
Blaser, G., Santos, K., Bode, U., Vetter, H. and Simon, A. (2007) Effect of medical honey on wounds colonised or infected with MRSA. Journal of Wound Care. 16(8): 325-328

Simon, A., Sofka, K., Wiszniewsky, G., Blaser, G., Bode, U. and Fleischhack, G. (2006) Wound care with antibacterial honey (Medihoney™) in pediatric hematology-oncology. Supportive Care in Cancer. 14(1): 91-7.

Due for completion 2009




A Randomised Control Trial feasibility study on the use of Medihoney ™ Antibacterial Wound Gel ™ following microvascular free tissue transfer to reduce the incidence of wound infection.

Objective: To assess the feasibility of using Medihoney™ Antibacterial Wound Gel™ at reducing the incidence of wound infection following microvascular free tissue reconstruction for head and neck cancer.

Setting: University of Aintree, UK

Completed February 2009