Dermatol Clin 23 (2005) 193 – 198
Cyanoacrylates for Skin Closure
William H. Eaglstein, MD*, Tory Sullivan, MD
Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Surgery, University of Miami School of Medicine, 1600 NW 10th Avenue,
RMSB 2023A, Miami, FL 33136, USA
Cyanoacrylates (CAs), first produced in 1949
[1], are liquids that polymerize in the presence
of moisture to form adhesives, glues, and films. The
surgical use of these compounds was first proposed
by Coover et al [2] in 1959. The short-chain cyanoacrylates (methyl, ethyl) [3,4] proved to be extremely
toxic to tissue, however, preventing their widespread
use as tissue glues. The short-chain CAs are used in
nonmedical products, such as Krazy glue (Elmer’s,
Columbus, Ohio), and although they are not intended
for medical use, dermatologists have been quoted in
the popular press as recommending these glues for
the treatment of fissures on fingers and toes [5]. Butyl
cyanoacrylate (BCA), an intermediate-length CA, is
not toxic when applied topically. Although it is not
approved by the US Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) for use in the United States, it has been used in
Europe and Canada for middle ear procedures, to
close cerebrospinal leaks, to repair incisions and
lacerations, and to affix skin grafts [6 – 12]. Recently,
a longer chain CA, octyl-2-cyanoacrylate (2-OCA),
has been approved by the FDA and is now marketed
(Dermabond topical skin adhesive) for closure of
lacerations and incisions in place of sutures or staples.
Even more recently, a 2-OCA formulated for greater
flexibility, Liquid Bandage, has been approved for
use in the over-the-counter market in the United
States for the treatment of minor cuts and abrasions.
This article discusses the use of CAs for their original
cutaneous use as glues for the repair of lacerations
and incisions and for their more recent use as films
for use as dressings in the treatment of abrasions
and wounds.
* Corresponding author.
Butyl cyanoacrylate
BCA is an intermediate-length CA that was the
first CA to be widely used for cutaneous wound
closure. It has been available and widely used in
Europe and Canada as Histoacryl Blue and Glustitch
since as early as the 1970s. Although the short-chain
CAs (methyl, ethyl) were toxic to tissue, BCA is
generally considered to be nontoxic when applied
topically. When used in an experimental model of
incisional wound healing in hamsters, BCA resulted
in less inflammation than 4.0 silk sutures on
histologic assessment [7]. Furthermore, a randomized
clinical trial involving 94 patients who had facial
lacerations suitable for tissue adhesive closure and
who underwent closure using either BCA or 2-OCA
failed to reveal a difference in cosmetic result at
3 months as rated from photographs by a plastic
surgeon using a visual analog scale [13]. Interpreting
these data to imply that BCA has no tissue toxicity
should be done with caution, however; care was taken
to prevent the BCA from coming in contact with
exposed wound tissue because of lingering concerns
that BCA when trapped in the wound itself might
cause a toxic reaction [14]. Because of these concerns, BCA has never been approved for use in the
United States and has never been actively advocated
for use on wounds as a film-forming or bandagelike agent.
Octyl cyanoacrylate
Octyl cyanoacrylates are CAs with a longer
(8-carbon) side chain. This longer side chain gives
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194
eaglstein
2-OCA several potential advantages over CAs that
have short or intermediate side chains. For example,
2-OCA is stronger and more flexible than BCA, with
4 times the three-dimensional breaking strength of
this shorter chain CA [15]. Because of its improved
strength and flexibility properties and because of
reduced fears of tissue toxicity, 2-OCA is now widely
used in the United States for wound closure, and it is
currently one of the largest bandage brands as ranked
by dollar sales in the United States.
Octyl cyanoacrylate and cosmetic outcome
Studies of 2-OCA have revealed that it is equivalent or superior to standard suturing of wounds as
judged by several criteria. When evaluated prospectively for the treatment of cutaneous lacerations [16]
and elective head and neck incisions [17], no differences in cosmetic outcome at 12 weeks were noted
when compared with standard suture repair. In the
same studies, patients rated 2-OCA closure as less
painful than standard suture closure, and wound
closure took significantly less time than with suture
repair. A larger study of 814 patients who had a more
diverse group of wounds (383 traumatic lacerations,
235 excisions of skin lesions or scar revisions, 208
minimally invasive surgeries, and 98 general surgical
procedures) also showed the equivalence of closure
with 2-OCA as compared with standard suture wound
closure in terms of cosmesis at 3-month follow-up.
Again, wound closure with 2-OCA was faster than
with standard suture wound closure (2.9 min versus
5.2 min, P < 0.001), and at 1 week, infection rates
were similar. There where were no differences in
wound dehiscence rates in this study. Despite multiple studies that showed similar outcomes in 2-OCA –
treated wounds and standard suture – treated wounds
in both adults and pediatric patients in cosmetic
appearance of the healed wound, there has been one
study where 2-OCA – treated wounds had an inferior
outcome [16 – 21]. In a study of 83 children who were
seen in an emergency department with lacerations
and randomized to receive either 2-OCA or nonabsorbable sutures or staples, the children treated
with 2-OCA ultimately had a slightly lower cosmesis
score [22]. As in similar studies, however, treatment
with 2-OCA resulted in a decreased repair time of
5.8 minutes with suture and staples to 2.9 minutes
with 2-OCA, and a reduction was found in the
parents’ assessment of the pain felt by their children.
Because this is the only study to show this outcome,
it should be interpreted with caution, but physicians
should consider whether 2-OCA is indicated for
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lacerations in the pediatric population in cosmetically
sensitive areas.
Octyl cyanoacrylate and infection
Because sutures inherently introduce foreign
material into a wound, 2-OCA may have a natural
comparative advantage in infection rates, especially
with clean contaminated wounds. In addition, CAs
have been reported to have inherent antimicrobial
properties, especially against gram-positive organisms [23]. In a randomized, blinded study, incisions
were made on guinea pigs and contaminated with
Staphylococcus aureus [24]. The incisions were then
randomly assigned to be closed with either 2-OCA or
5-0 polypropylene suture. At day 5, wounds were
then examined histologically and determined to be
infected if inflammatory cells with intracellular cocci
were seen. On the same day, wounds were also
examined for clinical evidence of infection and a
quantitative bacteriologic analysis was performed. Of
20 wounds in the tissue adhesive group, 5 wounds
were sterile on day 5, whereas all sutured wounds had
positive cultures (P < 0.05). Fewer wounds in the
tissue adhesive group were determined to be infected
by histologic and clinical criteria. Generally, differences in infection rates in human trials between
wounds closed with 2-OCA and standard suture
wound closure techniques have not been statistically
significant. Trials to date have frequently excluded
patients with grossly contaminated wounds, however.
Octyl cyanoacrylate and cost
Despite the apparent evidence of equivalence
or even advantage of 2-OCA for wound repair, its
adoption over standard wound closure techniques has
been relatively slow. This situation may be because
of cost disadvantages to the treating physician or
institutions. On a per-unit basis, 2-OCA (eg, Dermabond Ethicon Products, Somerville, New Jersey) is
10 times more expensive than a popular brand of
black monofilament nylon sutures [25]. Despite this
situation, the overall cost advantage to society and to
patients probably lies with the CAs. When the three
most commonly used methods for the repair of
pediatric facial lacerations—nondissolving sutures,
dissolving sutures, or a CA—were compared on an
economic basis, which included factors such as
equipment use, pharmaceutic use, health care worker
time, and parental loss of income for follow-up visits,
assuming an equal cosmetic outcome, there was a
reduction in cost to the Canadian health care system
from the use of CAs. The reduction in cost in
cyanoacrylates for skin closure
Canadian dollars per patient of switching from the
standard nondissolving sutures to a CA was $49.60
and for switching to dissolving sutures was $37.90
[26]. In addition, when parents of treated patients
were surveyed, they overwhelmingly (90% of parents) chose the use of the CA as their first choice for
wound closure (10% chose dissolving sutures). Despite the preference of parents and reduced costs
to the society, however, CAs will probably continue
to be the last choice of health care providers as long
as they are associated with increased direct cost to
the providers.
Cyanoacrylates as wound dressings
As concerns about potential tissue toxicity abate
and newer, more flexible 2-OCA formulations have
become available, CAs have been used not only for
the closure of wounds but also for the treatment of
wounds and as a wound dressing. Many physicians
remain skeptical about this use of 2-OCA out of
concern of tissue toxicity in earlier CAs; however,
animal studies have consistently failed to show any
tissue toxicity from 2-OCA when applied directly to
open tissue in wounds. In a guinea pig abrasion
model of wounds, there were no differences in the
mean wound-healing ratios on days 1, 7, or 14 for
2-OCA as compared with a control dressing (Biobrane), and histopathologic analysis on day 14 failed
to find any differences between the treatments [27].
In a porcine model of acute partial-thickness wounds,
2-OCA did not produce tissue toxicity (Stephen C.
Davis, William H. Eaglstein, MD, Alex L. Cazzaniga,
and P.M. Metz, unpublished observations, 2000).
Furthermore, faster healing was seen in the 2-OCA –
treated wounds as compared with the wounds treated
with commercial bandages. On day 5 post wounding,
67% of 2-OCA – treated wounds were completely
healed as compared with 20% of Band-Aid – treated
wounds. Other studies of 2-OCA for partial-thickness
wounds in pigs confirm these results and suggest
that 2-OCA compares favorably with other effective dressings. For example, 115 standardized
partial-thickness wounds were created in a porcine
wound-healing model and treated with 2-OCA, a
hydrocolloid dressing, or gauze. Biopsy specimens
were taken at days 4, 5, 6, and 21 post wounding. The
percentage of re-epithelialization in wounds treated
with the liquid occlusive and hydrocolloid dressings
was significantly greater at days 4 and 5 compared
with control wounds [28]. In addition, several
benefits have been attributed to the treatment of
195
wounds with 2-OCA, including increased resistance
to bacterial challenge of the wound and increased
wound hemostasis [29]. In vitro testing of 2-OCA has
confirmed that it forms an excellent barrier against
several bacterial and fungal pathogens [30]. Similar
results from the use of 2-OCA in burns have been
observed. One author evaluated the use of 2-OCA
second-degree burns as compared with treatment with
a polyurethane film dressing (Tegaderm). Forty-four
partial-thickness burns were created on the backs of
pigs, and wounds were randomly treated with 2-OCA
or the film dressing. Full-thickness biopsy specimens
were taken on days 7, 10, and 14 and evaluated for
infection and re-epithelialization. No statistically
significant difference was seen in the rates of reepithelialization and no wounds in either treatment
group became infected [31]. Singer et al [32]
compared the effects of treatment of partial-thickness
burns in pigs with 2-OCA, silver sulfadiazine (SSD),
polyurethane film (PU), and gauze on scarring after
3months. Forty partial-thickness burns were randomly assigned to be treated with 2-OCA, SSD,
PU, or gauze. Digital images and biopsy specimens
of the burns were obtained at 3 months. There were
no statistical differences in the proportion of wounds
with scarring among the groups (OCA = 10%,
SSD = 22%, PU = 2%, gauze = 30%; P = 0.89) or
in cosmetic scores among the groups ( P = 0.96) as
judged by blinded observers. The same authors also
evaluated infection rates of contaminated seconddegree burns in pigs treated similarly [33]. Eighty
partial-thickness burns were created and contaminated with 0.1 mL of S aureus 10(5) CFU/mL and
then randomly treated with 2-OCA, SSD, PU, or
gauze. The treatment of contaminated partial-thickness burns with 2-OCA resulted in fewer infections
at 1 week compared with the other three treatments.
Results of the use of 2-OCA for the treatment of
open wounds have been similar to those in animal
models. The current authors recently compared a
new, flexible formulation of 2-OCA (Liquid Bandage) to a commercially available over-the-counter
bandage for the treatment of cuts and scrapes [34].
Because short-chain CAs are irritating and toxic to
tissues and because Dermabond, which contains the
same 2-OCA as Liquid Bandage, is approved only
for application to the surfaces of wounds with approximated wound edges, the authors were particularly interested in evaluating the possibility that direct
application of 2-OCA to open cuts and scrapes would
be toxic or irritating to wounds. Eighty-two subjects in the study applied 2-OCA directly to their cuts
or scrapes and none experienced pain, redness,
warmth, or edema. In addition, neither infection nor
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delayed wound healing was seen in the 2-OCA –
treated wounds.
Cyanoacrylates and wound hemostasis
The hemostatic activity of CAs has been reported
in many studies [35 – 37]. In a porcine model of
epistasis, one group of authors created 24 fullthickness wounds on the nasal septae of pigs with
a 4-mm punch biopsy tool [38]. Wounds were randomized to either no treatment or to topical 2-OCA
before and after heparinization of the animals. The
authors reported that the time to complete hemostasis was significantly shorter in the wounds treated
with 2-OCA versus control (mean difference, 150 s;
P < 0.001). In porcine studies of partial-thickness
wounds, 2-OCA has been an effective hemostatic
agent [28,39]. In a human trial of 2-OCA for partialthickness wounds, it was reported to stop bleeding or
oozing immediately in 93% of wounds as compared
with 46% of wounds treated with standard bandages.
The ability to achieve rapid hemostasis is an attractive
feature of the CAs.
Cyanoacrylates as drug delivery devices
CAs offer potential as a drug delivery device in
which therapeutic agents can be directly incorporated
into the CA itself and as a dressing, which can keep a
therapeutic agent in place in a difficult anatomic
location. For the former application, CAs have been
used to create nanoparticles. These nanoparticles
have then been incorporated in vehicles for topical
application. BCA nanoparticles have been reported as
drug carriers of 5-fluorouracil, paclitaxel, and indomethicin intended for use in topical treatment
[40 – 42]. To the authors’ knowledge, however, currently no therapeutic agents have been directly incorporated into a CA itself for cutaneous application.
With regard to using 2-OCA as a device for maintaining an active agent in a difficult location, in one recent trial, 31 patients with recurrent aphthous lesions
were treated with either an active agent or a placebo.
Both the active agent and the placebo were maintained in place by coverage with a BCA [43]. Clearly,
further research is needed in both possible uses.
Miscellaneous uses of cyanoacrylates
Another use for 2-OCA is for the treatment
of wounds in the oral mucosa. Orabase (Colgate,
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Conton, Massachusetts), a flexible form of 2-OCA, is
specifically formulated for use in the oral mucosa
[44]. It is a unique product in the over-the-counter
market because, unlike other products, it is an
occlusive dressing, not simply a topical anesthetic.
To the current authors’ knowledge, Orabase is the
only over-the-counter product consumers can purchase that creates a mechanical barrier providing pain
relief for oral ulcerations and abrasions. In two
separate studies [45] of 200 patients with an aphthous
ulcer, 2-OCA when used in the oral mucosa provided
significant short- and long-term pain reduction as
compared with placebo treatment.
Summary
Even though the first CAs were produced in 1949,
they were not widely adopted for medical use until
recently because of lingering concerns about the
initial tissue toxicities of the short-chain CAs. Medium-chain CAs, primarily BCA, have been widely
used in Europe and Canada for several decades and
have gone a long way in dispelling any lingering
concerns about tissue toxicity. The newer, longer
chain CA, 2-OCA, now has been approved for
multiple uses in the United States and has achieved
widespread acceptance by the medical and lay communities. The current authors believe this development is probably only the beginning of the use of
2-OCA and other CAs in cutaneous medicine.
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