INTRODUCTION
Acute wounds follow an organized wound healing sequence and often heal between 3 and 4 weeks. When a wound is still present 4 weeks after wounding, it is defined as a chronic wound.1 Many research studies have been conducted on chronic wound management to address the rising demand for effective and affordable care. The healing trajectory of chronic wounds is expected to take 12 weeks.2,3 This period may be prolonged if the wound presents with an altered molecular environment, chronic inflammation or fibrosis,4 or uncorrected preexisting systemic factors.1
Patients who present with a wound not responding to conventional treatment are the topic of many best-practice guidelines using the umbrella terms "nonhealing" or "hard-to-heal."5,6 Advanced modalities such as negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT), ultrasound, laser, platelet-enriched plasma, hyperbaric oxygen (HBO), use of dermal substitutes, and reconstructive surgery are frequently advised as adjunctive intervention. Although appropriate to some wounds, there is a subgroup of patients for whom alternative approaches or endpoints are needed because advanced modalities either failed or are not feasible. This typically is the case when the patient presents with preexisting underlying systemic disease that cannot be controlled, is in need of additional physiologic support (eg, supplementary oxygen, renal dialysis), has difficulty performing activities of daily living without help, experiences financial and/or social difficulties, or lives in a resource-restricted environment without access to advanced care.
The wound bed preparation (WBP) paradigm2,7 guides wound care practitioners to determine wound healing potential as a vital first step of wound assessment. By accounting for both underlying causes and patient-centered concerns, providers can plan for realistic outcomes. The paradigm includes "problem wound" scenarios. Wounds with underlying cause(s) that cannot be corrected are categorized as nonhealable wounds (often attributable to critical ischemia, malignancy, or an untreatable underlying systemic condition).2,7 Wounds with correctable underlying cause(s) in the context of health system challenges (ie, lack of resources, skills, or expertise) or nonoptimal patient factors (ie, smoking, obesity, resistance to change) are categorized as maintenance wounds.2,7
Evidence-based guidance on nonhealable or maintenance wounds is needed. This systematic integrative review aims to identify, appraise, analyze, and synthesize evidence regarding nonhealable and maintenance wound management to guide clinical practice.
METHODS
This study was granted ethical exemption (nr. 2019_19.8-5.3) by the University of South Africa Department of Health Studies Research Ethics Committee (no. REC-012714-039) because it did not involve human participants. The research question was: What is known from scientific literature regarding the management of nonhealable and maintenance wounds?
Data Sources
A subject information specialist and two authors of the study conducted a comprehensive literature search using the electronic databases Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, Academic Search Ultimate, Africa-Wide Information, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature with Full Text, Health Source: Consumer Edition, Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition, and MEDLINE. Studies from January 2011 (when the WBP classification of healable, nonhealable, and maintenance wounds2 was established) to September 2019 (the month the search was conducted) were included. The search was not restricted by language or study methodology. Key words included (guideline* or framework* or consensus* or "care pathway*" or paradigm*), (manag* or maint* or treat*), (wound* or ulcer* or injur*) in relation to (nonheal* or chronic or stalled or recur* or "delay* healing" or "hard to heal" or "lower leg*" or "diabetic foot" or pressure or fungating). In addition to the database search, published studies were hand searched by the authors.
Study Selection
Duplicates were removed using the Evidence for Policy and Practice Information Reviewer software (v 4.0; EPPI-Centre, London, England). Titles were screened by one author, followed by independent screening of abstracts by two authors according to selection criteria (Table 1). In addition, a hard-to-heal category was created to facilitate the sorting of studies on stalled nonhealing chronic wounds for wounds that failed to heal but were not yet defined as either a maintenance or nonhealable wound.1,4 Two authors independently examined the full-text publications for relevance to the study question and consulted with a third author if they could not reach a consensus.
Publications not meeting the selection criteria (Table 1) were excluded. Investigators also excluded editorials, discussions, corporate education papers, expert opinions not validated by a Delphi process, case studies, case series, and retrospective study designs because of methodology concerns. Non-English articles were excluded if not followed by English translation.
Quality Appraisal
Two-author appraisals were done independently for each study using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Systematic Reviews and Research Syntheses8 and the Crowe Critical Appraisal Tool (v 1.4)9 for best-practice guidelines, consensus documents, and original studies. A user manual guided the correct use of each quality appraisal tool. The minimum threshold for inclusion for each tool was set at 60% average. A third author was involved if the two scores differed by more than 20%, and the two highest scores were used.
Data Extraction
The final set of included articles was distributed among groups of two or three authors responsible for a wound type and independently co-coding study data. Coding framework topics (Table 2) were collaboratively developed by the research team from the work of authors in the field of study.2,7,10-15 Deductive coding focused on extracting relevant content from the results, discussion, and/or conclusion sections of each included article.
Data Synthesis
Coded sections were clustered into a table to provide a comprehensive overview of evidence by topic and wound type. The teams met in November 2019 to provide a summary of the main findings for each wound type to the whole group. A second analysis was conducted by the three senior authors to identify and describe commonalities (themes) by comparing the extracted information.
RESULTS
The literature search yielded 1,714 records, and the hand search, 36 records. There were 233 relevant titles, with 92 abstracts relevant to the research question. After examining the full-text articles, 61 were excluded. In the remaining 31 studies, three scored less than 60% on the quality appraisal tools. The quality appraisal scores and the strengths and weaknesses of each included study (n = 28) are summarized in Supplemental Table 1 (http://links.lww.com/NSW/A51); the flow of the selection process is depicted in Figure 1.16
Researchers analyzed 13 reviews, 6 best-practice guidelines, 3 consensus studies (based on Delphi techniques), and 6 original studies (1 multimethod and 5 nonexperimental, descriptive, and/or correlational quantitative designs). No randomized controlled trials were identified. The characteristics of the included studies are outlined in Supplemental Tables 2 (http://links.lww.com/NSW/A52), 3 (http://links.lww.com/NSW/A53), and 4 (http://links.lww.com/NSW/A54).
Data Synthesis and Theme Identification
This section reports a summary of the extracted data from the included studies for five wound types: malignant fungating wounds (MFWs), lower leg ulcers (LLUs), diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs), pressure injuries (PIs), and atypical wounds. Three articles focused on local wound bed interventions and are summarized separately.
Malignant Fungating Wounds
Two studies on MFWs were included and addressed the effect of topical agents and dressings on quality of life (QoL) for people with MFWs17 and resilience when living with a wound.18
Adderley and Holt17 did not find evidence on the effect of dressings on QoL. Weak evidence suggests the use of 6% miltefosine topical solution or foam dressings with silver on superficial wounds could delay disease progression and reduce malodor.17 Evidence supporting the use of honey-coated dressings is not sufficient.17
Ousey and Edwards18 identified pain and fatigue as barriers to maintaining health-related QoL (HRQoL). Practitioners must acknowledge the emotional needs of patients with MFWs who may experience destructive feelings and feelings of avoidance. Loss of bodily function control also impedes the ability to cope with the disease.18 Persons living with an MFW want to be informed about physical limitations and psychological consequences (such as sudden hemorrhage), and they appreciate advice on wound management.18
Lower Leg Ulcers
Venous leg ulcers (VLUs) account for up to 80% of all LLUs,19 which account for the eight articles included on VLUs: two reviews20,21 and one consensus study22 on compression therapy, one review3 and one guideline on the holistic management of VLUs,19 one quantitative survey on VLU management,24 one cohort study on sustained behavior change following a client education program,25 and one review on cost-effectiveness.26 The ninth article, a review by the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH), provided evidence on arterial ulcers and mixed etiology ulcers, reporting the lack of current consensus on optimal wound management for mixed arterial-venous ulcers.27 All nine studies used the terms nonhealing chronic wounds or wounds with extended time to healing (>12 weeks).
A consensus-based algorithm recommends that ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI) be used for its high specificity in detecting peripheral arterial disease (PAD) as an underlying cause in LLUs22 and that significant PAD requires immediate referral to a vascular surgeon.19,21,27 However, a survey among nurses identified a significant knowledge-translation gap regarding ABPIs.24
All the evidence supports compression therapy as key to VLU management.19-23,27 However, guidelines advise against compression therapy in the presence of significant PAD or pulmonary edema, but do recommend immediate referral to a vascular assessment service.19,21,27 The included studies support modified compression carefully monitored by a well-trained clinician for mild PAD (ABPI 0.5-0.8) and standard compression therapy in the absence of PAD.19-22
The included guideline argues that chronic, hard-to-heal VLUs can be transformed into acute wounds by means of debridement once PAD is excluded, malignancy ruled out, and other inflammatory comorbidities accounted for.19 All studies supported the WBP paradigm for maintenance wounds.7,22,23 When LLUs are not healing as expected, providers should reassess the patient at least every 12 weeks for other potential causes and repeat the ABPI measurement.20,22 Further, NPWT is not indicated for healable VLUs over topical modalities; it is effective for securing a skin graft in hard-to-heal wounds, but not as a modality on its own.23 There is substantial evidence on the efficacy of electrical stimulation as an adjunctive modality in VLU to achieve healing progress.23
Venous leg ulcers significantly impact social and physical functioning; pain is particularly prominent in the ulcerative phase or with secondary infection.19 Only one of the included studies recommends dressings for local pain relief, but concludes that compression therapy remains the key to pain control.19
Effective VLU management requires sustained behavior change.19,22,25 Patient education should include leg health, emphasis on regular activity, the role of pharmaceuticals, the importance of compression, optimal positioning of legs during rest, promotion of a healthy diet and adequate hydration, and skin care. Nonadherence to modifying lifestyle factors may lead to extended healing times or nonhealing.22,25 Positive behavior change was achieved via e-learning in a prospective single sample cohort study.25 Recurrence of VLU is common, and strong evidence supports use of stockings as primary prevention to improve the aching and itching associated with venous insufficiency.22
Carter26 reviewed the cost-effectiveness of new or evidence-based intervention systems versus routine care to guide decision-making. One study in this review (an unblinded randomized controlled trial of moderate evidence strength) concluded that four-layer compression bandages resulted in faster healing versus the control group (standard care) with consequent financial cost savings. However, they also reported compression bandage application skill to be a key factor in achieving positive VLU outcomes.26 Another key message from this review was that a multidisciplinary team managing VLUs achieved faster healing by 36.5 days in the intervention group with consequent financial cost savings.
Diabetic Foot Ulcers
These ulcers are classified as hard-to-heal wounds; expected healing trajectories are often missed because of patient factors or healthcare resource limitations.28 One systematic review discussing NPWT for DFUs,29 one original study,30 and four guidelines31-34 were included in this portion of the review. The guidelines and original study addressed holistic management of DFUs with one discussing HBO.33
Two guidelines recommended that PAD should be assessed to establish healability because DFUs can become nonhealable wounds with inadequate perfusion, rendering those patients unsuitable candidates for revascularization.31,32 Such nonhealable wounds might result in amputation because of increased infection risk.30
Glycemic control of and nutrition support for diabetes to enhance wound healing are supported by strong levels of evidence.31 When addressing the cause of DFUs, plantar pressure redistribution (offloading) is the key to success.32 The guidelines further recommended that DFUs should be debrided to reduce biologic load and risk of infection when adequate blood supply is present.31,32 In hard-to-heal wounds with inadequate perfusion, debridement should be conservative.31 Infection should be treated systemically, especially with a positive probe-to-bone test. When surgery is not an option, systemic antibiotic treatment should be prolonged (6 to 8 weeks).31 There is insufficient evidence for topical antibiotics in these wounds, and their use is associated with increased local and systemic microbial resistance.31 Dressing choice should take into consideration the condition of the wound and surrounding skin.32
One guideline suggests strong evidence for HBO as adjunctive therapy for the treatment of Wagner stage 3 DFUs.33 Further, a review by the CADTH concluded that DFUs treated with NPWT showed significantly reduced ulcer areas, healing time, and the need for secondary/major amputation when compared with DFUs not treated with NPWT.29 These modalities may be indicated in hard-to-heal DFUs but are not recommended for maintenance of nonhealable wounds.
The general review from Ousey and Edwards18 also included three quantitative studies that reported on the psychological effects of living with a DFU. They found a lower HRQoL with a decline in physical and social functioning among a group of 35 patients living with a DFU compared with a group of 15 persons with diabetes without a wound. Further, depression was related to development of the first DFU among a group of 333 participants and was a persistent risk factor for mortality and presented a 33% increased risk of amputations.18
Clinicians attending to patients with DFUs must have the necessary skills and equipment to accurately and holistically assess and treat them.31 All of the guidelines included in this study strongly recommend an interprofessional approach to treating DFUs because of their complex nature.31-34 These teams should address factors such as patient-centered concerns, access to care, financial limitations, and foot and self-care.31,32
Pressure Injuries
Four studies were included in this portion of the review: one cross-sectional observational design,35 two reviews,36,37 and one guideline.38 Gelis et al37 stressed that PIs are "not a chronic disease but rather a complication in cases of immobility," suggesting that PI evolution and prognosis correlate with the contexts in which such injuries and wounds occur; that is, PIs may evolve as maintenance or nonhealing wounds according to the underlying pathology. Guihan and Bombardier35 concluded that the complex underlying comorbidities among persons with slow healing and stage 3 and 4 PIs require an interprofessional approach. Early and aggressive management of acute and chronic PIs may prevent or change the development cycle of hard-to-heal or maintenance wounds over time.35
Fujiwara et al38 included studies focusing on diagnosis and treatment of stage 1-4 PIs. They support pressure and shear forces as underlying causes and strongly recommend pressure relief with position changes every 2 hours and the use of appropriate pressure-relieving mattresses (based on strong evidence). Pain control is an important aspect of patient-centered concerns to improve the HRQoL of patients with PIs. Some evidence in the review suggests pressure-relieving mattresses and specific wound dressings (eg, soft silicone, alginate, and hydrogels). Evidence for the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory and/or psychotropic drugs exists, but is weak.38 Their recommendation to debride devitalized tissue was for healable wounds where the cause could be corrected. For hard-to-heal, maintenance, or nonhealable PIs, no recommendation on debridement could be drawn from the evidence. Surgery may remain as an option once the underlying cause can be corrected and the condition of the patient improved.
In the presence of deep infection, a systemic antibiotic is suggested using a positive bacterial culture from the wound bed to guide treatment.38 In addition, signs of persistent inflammation in the periwound area, pyrexia, an increased white blood cell count, or worsening of the inflammatory reaction should be addressed.38 A comprehensive assessment of the patient, the wound bed, and periwound area should be conducted to diagnose wound infection. The CADTH did not find evidence to support specific wound dressings and stated: "one dressing will be as good as the other."36
Gelis et al37 reviewed evidence on patients with chronic neurologic impairment at risk of PI and suggested continuing therapeutic education for older adults, persons with spinal cord injuries, and others at risk.37 They also recommend several pedagogic models for use based on the learning style of the specific patient and involving the circle of care in prevention. Providers should support patient self-management of multiple chronic conditions, because several comorbidities often occur simultaneously in persons with slow-healing PIs.35
Atypical Wounds
Four articles were included in this part of the review. These referred to Buruli ulcer, hidradenitis suppurativa, epidermolysis bullosa, and vasculitis- and autoimmune-associated wounds. These wounds present with unusual signs and symptoms and/or locations and do not heal within 4 to 12 weeks, and often the underlying conditions are difficult to manage in clinical practice.
In a Ghanaian Buruli ulcer prospective observational study, the authors found that earlier wound closure (less than 12 weeks) was more likely in primary healthcare settings compared with secondary settings despite a lack of resources, staff incompetency, and high patient loads.39 This was attributed to earlier presentation, smaller wounds, better nutrition status, better patient adherence to treatment, and intact social support. Wound closure failure occurred in primary healthcare in the presence of underlying complications, such as osteomyelitis, squamous cell carcinoma, chronic lymphedema, and infection. In the secondary healthcare setting, nutrition deficiency, venous and arterial insufficiency, lymphedema, and malignant deterioration were associated with impaired wound healing. This was mostly attributable to poor hygiene and deficient skills and resources leading to recurrent wound infection. Failure to heal became predictable between weeks 2 and 4.
Alavi et al40 explored hidradenitis suppurativa patient-centered concerns related to sexuality. This observational two-legged cross-sectional study found that both men and women with HS experience negative impacts on their QoL. Men experienced sexual performance issues and women experienced sexual distress because of the location of these painful exuding lesions.
The epidermolysis bullosa study reports an expert consensus of recommendations for practice.41 The main recommendations included active interventions to control persistent inflammation leading to malignancy; an interprofessional team approach to assessment, identification, and management of underlying factors; delicate management of blisters; optimization of nutrition status with attention to albumin and hemoglobin levels; use of healing trajectory indicators to predict healing potential; and the importance of a skin edge biopsy in recalcitrant wounds to rule out squamous cell carcinoma.
Shanmugam et al42 review the evaluation and management of hard-to-heal wounds associated with vasculitis and autoimmune etiologies. Wounds not responding to local care and appropriate vascular intervention may have an underlying vasculitis or autoimmune disorder present. An interprofessional team can facilitate the required underlying systemic disease investigation. Skin graft failure should prompt high provider suspicion of vasculitis; an edge biopsy may be helpful to confirm diagnosis.42
Local Wound Bed Factors
Three articles addressed local wound bed issues prevalent in problem wounds regardless of type and addressed malodor, the nonhealing spiral, and maggot debridement therapy (MDT).
Akhmetova et al43 aimed to summarize studies focusing on odor control in chronic wound management. Five control measures with substantial evidence were identified. Metronidazole gel was most extensively studied; five studies reported it reduced odor, exudate, and pain. Topical silver (and silver sulfadiazine use) was included because it is not deemed an antibiotic but rather an antimicrobial agent. Four studies supported its use because of its antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory effect on the wound bed. Charcoal is known to absorb gases, bacteria, and liquids; one study supported its use. Medical-grade honey for odor control was mentioned in three studies, and research on topical cadexomer iodine use in VLUs reported odor reduction as a secondary outcome.43
Schultz et al44 published a guideline for the identification and treatment of chronic nonhealing wounds. "Nonhealing" is not defined in the article in terms of a time frame or underlying cause, but in general as chronic wounds not healing in a timely fashion despite optimal intervention. A key recommendation is the initial use of aggressive debridement in combination with topical antiseptics and systemic antibiotics followed by a step-down approach until healing.44 A consensus statement indicates that this recommendation is relevant for aggressive management of wounds that might have some potential for healing.44 Further research is required to evaluate the effectiveness, validity, reliability, and reproducibility of the algorithms available to diagnose and treat biofilm. Further exploration into different wound types will be necessary to provide a clear guide on definite signs and symptoms associated with biofilm in the wound bed; for example, ischemic ulcers may not manifest the same signs and symptoms of biofilm because of the lack of blood flow.44
Sherman45 provided a summary of MDT and recommendations on when to initiate it as modality. The author concluded that MDT has three broad actions: debridement, disinfection, and tissue growth stimulation, although the focus was on debridement. The chemical debridement occurs via alimentary secretions and excretions containing digestive enzymes, inhibiting microbial growth and biofilm formation. Further, this action induces maturation of monocytes and neutrophils from proinflammatory cells into their angiogenic phenotype, which could lift the wound out of the inflammatory phase.45 Therefore, MDT is of value as an adjunctive modality in addressing local wound bed factors in hard-to-heal wounds to counteract stalled wound growth, but it is contraindicated in dry wounds because maggots need moisture to survive.
DISCUSSION
Despite the proposed definition/classification of wounds into healable, maintenance, and nonhealable by Sibbald et al,2 very few authors used those terms in publications, a concern also voiced by Olsson et al.46 Common terms were "chronic," "nonhealing," "slow healing," or "atypical," all with limited reference to wound duration, healing time, or alternative outcomes. This led to authors' extraction of available data elements into an additional "hard-to-heal" category, allowing for inclusion where healing time or the influence of underlying causes was not described. However, despite the lack of clear definitions, this study identified similarities in management across the different hard-to-heal wound types, and these commonalities encompass the following themes (Table 3).
Accurate and Appropriate Assessment
Early identification of underlying conditions and skillful attention to existing patient and system factors are essential to promote healing at an optimal rate (decreasing 30% in size within 4 weeks).10 Providers must determine healability (within the first 12 weeks) and use valid assessment tools. A systematic and comprehensive approach to history taking, physical examination, and laboratory investigations to reach a clear diagnosis improves outcomes.39 Lack of adequate blood supply remains a major underlying cause present in most nonhealing or maintenance wounds and should be assessed regularly.19,21,24,27 Depression is strongly associated with the onset of DFUs, and if left untreated, increases subsequent amputation and mortality risk.18 Providers should actively screen and prioritize intervention and appropriate treatment for depression in patients with long-duration wounds.18
Focused, Evidence-Based Cause Intervention
Adequate cause identification and initiating corrective interventions to mitigate underlying causes early in the wound healing sequence could prevent wound conversion. The substantial list of direct deficits that add to local wound deterioration and chronicity includes osteomyelitis, squamous cell carcinoma, chronic lymphedema, and wound infection,39 and these conditions require intervention or aggressive control to recreate and establish wound bed progression or stability. A hard-to-heal, stalled, or atypical wound should prompt an edge biopsy including the reticular dermis and subcutaneous tissue to assess pathology.41 Providers should strive for early classification of nonhealable wounds when underlying causes cannot be effectively treated or are deemed uncorrectable,47 with an accompanying shift in focus toward palliation and HRQoL.
Improve HRQoL
Chronic wounds lead to personal, financial, social, psychosocial, and sexual adaptations beyond simply coping with the effects of the wound. Critically, depression is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in patients with diabetes.18 The benefits of consistent attention to pain management are a key finding in most of the evidence reviewed,18 and multiple pain types may require polypharmacy interventions. It is vital to recognize and manage patient-centered concerns with a focus on improving HRQoL by maintaining activities of daily living and addressing ambulation,48 self-reliance,18 knowledge translation, and self-esteem.17,18 Patient-centered concerns should be prioritized as highly as underlying causes because the impact of wound healing on HRQoL may be hidden or dormant, which in turn negatively impacts healing.
Adapted Local Wound Care
Appropriate interventions regarding tissue, infection and inflammation, moisture, and edge management remain a cornerstone of local wound care. Different debridement approaches may range from careful and conservative removal of devitalized tissue,31,32 puncturing blisters and not deroofing,41 to surgical debridement to remove biofilm or advance edges.39,44 These authors recommend careful conservative debridement, which should be performed only by skilled practitioners if adequate arterial blood supply is present to support the wound bed and surrounding tissue.
Aggressive infection control should include actions to treat and prevent recurring superficial and deep wound infection,44,45,48 including assessment of the patient's vital and metabolic status, wound bed, and periwound area. The topical application of any antibiotic preparation such as ointments or creams (eg, gentamicin, fusidic acid, mupirocin) is not recommended by the International Wound Infection Institute because of global concern about antibiotic resistance and the subsequent systemic resistance.49 Addressing malodor with appropriate dressings is recommended43 and may be included after a risk analysis on the additional moisture added to a wound bed. Providers and patients should keep nonhealing and maintenance wound beds as dry as possible23 to preserve tissue;22 to protect the edges against trauma,41 bacterial invasion,44 and moisture-related skin breakdown;18,26 and prevent further tissue loss or wound expansion. These results provided clear guidance on the edge effect; wound area reductions less than 20% to 40% in 2 to 4 weeks could be a reliable predictor of nonhealing.39 That is, providers should not wait 12 weeks without wound edge progress to intervene.
Health Dialogue Priorities
Patients need to understand their situation fully and be guided to self-reliance.18 Education should accommodate different learning styles with attention to modifiable risk factors (smoking, poor glycemic control, and resistance to lower limb compression). Health dialogue is strongly associated with financial cost savings.26 eLearning platforms (mobile phone, social media) are powerful patient education tools and facilitate health dialogue that incorporates the patient's care circle in a culturally and patient-appropriate manner. Online learning strategies that include pressure redistribution, nutrition supplementation, skincare, and incontinence care could effectively incorporate the family into the care circle with cost containment as an additional outcome.26 The value of targeted patient learning may be further enhanced via the financial benefits of DFU prevention.26
Health System Challenges
This review identified sets of professional skills, or the lack thereof, which impact wound-related outcomes and healing times. These include assessment (ABPI in LLUs,22 DFU grading33) and correct clinical management (application of compression bandages,20-22 initial foot pressure redistribution32). Lack of provider expertise is an often-overlooked iatrogenic factor in hard-to-heal or stalled wounds24 that leads to loss of valuable time, additional wound complications, and late referral to an interprofessional team for advanced intervention. Recognizing limitations is vital in early referral to a skilled practitioner/interprofessional team.
However, in resource-restricted or rural settings, interprofessional teams may not be feasible, emphasizing the importance of wound care knowledge for all providers. In fact, limited resources leading to delayed healing is a factor often overlooked in the literature. The review by Carter26 supports the cost-effectiveness of guideline-driven versus standard care for chronic wounds. Early identification of maintenance wounds may prevent the prolonged use of resources despite the lack of progress,22,26 which could in turn positively impact treatment-associated costs for both the patient and healthcare system.
In the future, the prevention of skin breakdown regardless of wound etiology may be the highest priority of any healthcare professional because of the direct cost saving associated with skin-protective strategies.7,22,26 This is evident in PI and DFU prevention, where early intervention and prevention are frequently measured by key performance indicators (incidence and prevalence data)50 to save skin from repetitive breakdown and prevent amputations.51
Rational Use of Adjunctive Modalities
In the hands of the interprofessional team, last-resort adjunctive wound therapies (NPWT, HBO, flap/graft surgery, electrostimulation, MDT)23,27,33,45 have the best potential to promote healing when patient issues, wound history, and resource limitations are accounted for in hard-to-heal wounds. However, most advanced modalities are not a viable adjunctive option for maintenance and nonhealable wounds with dry23 or bleeding wound beds18 and may not represent the most optimal use of resources.22,26
Interprofessional Team Approach Significance
The most important finding (present in the majority of the included studies) was that an early interprofessional approach can facilitate correct interventions and wound management options.19,21,26,27,31,32,35,41,42 This timely and accurate intervention may prevent downward spirals into chronicity.18,31-33,35,41,42 Assessment, diagnosis, and appropriate interventions for slow healing or stalled wounds often require advanced wound care skills19-22,27 more readily available in an interprofessional team. Evidence supports this intervention as cost-effective compared with standard routine care over prolonged periods of time.26
Despite this strong recommendation, the interprofessional team is often a last resort and utilized too late to break the cycle of slow healing and chronicity. Patients are vital members of the interprofessional team because they dictate the potential of the team to achieve set outcomes, especially if faced with prolonged healing.22 However, clinicians may still struggle to determine when it is appropriate to consult with an interprofessional team. For this reason, the authors developed an interprofessional referral pathway using time- and wound-related markers that may indicate the appropriate time to involve the interprofessional team (Figure 2).
Interprofessional Referral Pathway
In doing this review, the research team realized that hard-to-heal wounds follow a typical sequence of events attributable to provider, patient, payer, policy, or persistent uncorrected underlying factors52,53 rather than being a wound type per se. Essentially, hard-to-heal wounds have specific needs and are an additional category in the process of determining healability:
1. healable: where healing occurs predictably according to expected time frames;
2. hard-to-heal: where slow, stalled, or nonhealing wounds are in need of additional assessment or care modalities;
3. maintenance: where health dialogue for lifestyle modification becomes more important than achieving a wound healing outcome;
4. nonhealable: where aggressive attention to local infection prevention and preservation against further tissue loss is needed and no wound healing outcome can be achieved.
It became clear from compiling data elements into themes that prompt identification of wound healing failure is a priority. The complex factors affecting wound healing should be routinely reassessed, and providers should maintain a flexible perspective on the healing trajectory. In current literature, the exact expected time to healing (ie, a defined cutoff point when wounds are classified as maintenance wounds) remains elusive. With this in mind, the research team proposes a referral pathway with specific time frames to help health professionals in decision-making (Figure 2). Timely referral could lead to optimal intervention in the vital early period of wounding and promote available adjunctive interventions when positive outcomes can still be attained.
The pathway proposes that hard-to-heal wounds be granted another 12 weeks of optimal wound care to achieve healing (30% decrease rate within 4 weeks). If the wound does not progress despite advanced team intervention, it can then be classified as a maintenance wound (where patient or system issues prevent cause correction).2 Reassessment and management by wound care specialists fully trained to apply current best evidence and well-positioned on an interprofessional wound care team are critical. The proposed additional 12 weeks of aggressive interprofessional management should be further explored and tested in future research. These studies could consider interventions with or without advanced wound care modalities because such modalities may not be available in resource-restricted contexts.
Limitations
This review was limited to studies from 2011 to 2019 and only considered evidence prior to 2011 if it was included in the selected studies. Guidelines not identified through the search could be of value if the guidelines clearly and transparently report the identification and appraisal of the evidence. Further, key words for specific atypical wounds were not included in the search. This was done to extract studies focused on maintenance and nonhealable wound interventions as well as to limit the yield. However, studies on atypical wounds were hand searched by the research team but had small sample sizes and paucity of evidence.
This study did not include case studies or case series, but the investigators acknowledge that multiple case studies could be the highest level of evidence available in challenging cases or environments. A future review of existing case studies/case series could prove of value to identify current practicalities when dealing with this subgroup of wounds. Studies on the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of local wound bed innovations in resource-restricted contexts would be a valuable contribution and more so if conducted in real-life clinical settings and in collaboration with academics and practitioners.
CONCLUSIONS
Active patient involvement in the care process is critical to manage a maintenance or nonhealable wound and achieve acceptable outcomes. Once a nonhealable, maintenance, or hard-to-heal wound is identified, not only should a full reassessment be made by a skilled team of healthcare professionals, but focused clinical interventions such as an edge biopsy or advanced vascular assessment should confirm the wound classification and guide patient and provider decision-making.
Evidence on the exact clinical management of maintenance and nonhealable wounds is insufficient to guide practice. The most common findings were the need for early diagnosis and prompt treatment within the first 12 weeks, comprehensive identification of underlying factors delaying healing, and early involvement of the interprofessional team. An interprofessional referral pathway was developed to incorporate an additional 12-week intervention period in hard-to-heal or late-referral wounds.
If wound assessment reveals a maintenance or nonhealable wound, it is important to realize that this diagnosis will impact the patient on physical, personal, interpersonal, social, and financial levels. The main priority should be to preserve patient integrity in these arenas with a focused patient-centered intervention. Long-term pain management should be prioritized. Further, patient preparation with focused health dialogue is vital to identify and facilitate life adaptations needed to cope with this diagnosis. The incorporation of newly learned or adapted skills into the patient's own activities of daily living will positively impact QoL. Patients with maintenance, nonhealing, and hard-to-heal wounds should take responsibility for their own self-care where possible and for as long as possible.
PRACTICE PEARLS
* A wound that does not heal at a rate of 30% per week should be reassessed by an interprofessional team sooner rather than later; do not wait 12 weeks before referral.
* Hard-to-heal wounds, or those that stall over time, may benefit from an interprofessional team's intervention that may include reassessment and a change of treatment strategy to address the underlying cause of the wound.
* Once diagnosed with a maintenance wound, patients need to be empowered with sufficient knowledge and social/family support to maintain activities of daily living and self-care as long as possible.
* The holistic management of both maintenance and nonhealable wounds involves shifting focus away from achieving wound outcomes and toward addressing patient-centered concerns such as pain management and odor control.
* The clinical focus for nonhealable wounds should include aggressive topical infection control to achieve tissue stability, preservation of existing stable dry tissue, and prevention of wound edge expansion.
REFERENCES