# Efficacy of Cryopreserved Amniotic Membrane Allograft in the Management of Refractory Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers: A Randomized Controlled Trial

**Authors:** Mohit Naren Kondapalli, Sanjay C Desai, Sandeep Mani Kumar Jakka, Suhas S Gowda

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.104015 · Cureus · 2026-02-21

## TL;DR

Cryopreserved amniotic membrane helps heal chronic leg ulcers faster and reduces pain compared to standard treatment.

## Contribution

This study shows that cryopreserved amniotic membrane improves wound healing and lowers infection rates in hard-to-heal leg ulcers.

## Key findings

- 81.25% of patients with cryopreserved amniotic membrane achieved complete wound closure in 45 days.
- The intervention group had a 36-day median healing time versus 78 days in the control group.
- Pain scores were lower and infection rates were reduced in the amniotic membrane group.

## Abstract

Background and aims

Chronic venous leg ulcers present a clinical challenge due to persistent inflammation, proteolytic imbalance, and senescence of the extracellular matrix. Dehydrated amniotic products are utilized; however, cryopreserved amniotic membrane retains the native heavy chain hyaluronic acid and viable growth factors that are often altered during heat dehydration processing. This study evaluated the efficacy of cryopreserved amniotic membrane allografts in promoting wound closure and reducing pain in patients with refractory venous ulcers compared to standard compression therapy.

Methods

A prospective, single-center, randomized controlled trial was conducted. Sixty-four patients with venous ulcers persisting for more than eight weeks were randomized (1:1). The intervention group (n=32) received topical application of culture-confirmed cryopreserved amniotic membrane alongside standard multi-layer compression therapy. The control group (n=32) received standard compression therapy alone. Wounds were assessed weekly by blinded independent evaluators. The primary efficacy endpoint was the complete wound closure rate at 45 days. Secondary outcomes included Kaplan-Meier survival analysis for time-to-healing, microbiologically confirmed infection rates, and pain reduction measured by the Visual Analog Scale (VAS). All analyses were conducted on an intention-to-treat (ITT) basis.

Results

The intervention group achieved a higher rate of complete wound closure (81.25%) compared to the control group (46.88%) at 45 days (Risk Difference: 34.4%, 95% CI: 12.4% to 56.3%; p=0.004). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis indicated a lower median time to complete epithelialization in the intervention group (36 days, 95% CI: 31-41) versus the control group (78 days, 95% CI: 71-85) (Log-rank test, p<0.001). Patients in the intervention group reported lower VAS pain scores by day 14. The incidence of confirmed wound infection was 6.25% in the intervention group versus 28.12% in the control group (Risk Difference: 21.9%, 95% CI: 4.4% to 39.4%; p=0.02).

Conclusion

Cryopreserved amniotic membrane promotes wound closure and reduces pain in refractory chronic venous leg ulcers. Its application serves as a biological adjunct to standard compression therapy in the management of hard-to-heal wounds.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infection (MESH:D007239), Wounds (MESH:D014947), pain (MESH:D010146), Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers (MESH:D014647), wound infection (MESH:D014946), inflammation (MESH:D007249)
- **Chemicals:** Cryopreserved Amniotic Membrane (-), hyaluronic acid (MESH:D006820)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13007271/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13007271