Abstract

BackgroundPatients with burn injuries may receive a skin graft to achieve healing in a timely manner. However, in around 7% of cases, the skin graft is lost (fails to attach to the wound site) and a re-grafting procedure is necessary. It has been hypothesised that low-friction (smooth, more slippery) bedding may reduce the risk of skin-graft loss. A before and after feasibility study comparing low-friction with standard bedding in skin-grafted patients was conducted in order to collect proof of concept data. The resulting relative risk on the primary outcome (number of patients with skin graft failure) for the non-randomised study provided no evidence of effect but had a large standard error. The aim of this study is to see if an appropriately powered randomised control trial would be worthwhile.MethodsA probabilistic decision-analytic model was constructed to compare low-friction bedding to standard care in a population of burn patients who have undergone skin grafting. Results from the before and after study were used as model inputs. The sensitivity of results to bias in the relative risk of graft loss was conducted. Low-friction bedding is considered optimal if expected incremental net benefit (INB) is positive. Uncertainty is assessed using cost-effectiveness acceptability curves. Expected Value of Perfect Partial Information (EVPPI) provides an upper bound for the potential net health benefits of new research for given model input.ResultsAt a willingness to pay threshold of £20,000 per QALY, INB = £151 (95% Credible Interval (CrI) −142 to 814), marginally favouring low-friction bedding but with high uncertainty (probability of being cost-effective 70.5%). Expected value of perfect information (EVPI) per patient was £20.29, which results in a population EVPI of £174,765 over a 10-year lifetime for the technology (based on 1000 patients per year who would benefit from the intervention). The parameter contributing most to the uncertainty was the inpatient care cost, i.e. information that could be obtained from the audit of practice and without an expensive trial. These findings were robust to a wide-range of assumptions about the potential bias due to the observational nature of the comparative evidence.ConclusionsOur study results suggest that an RCT (randomised controlled trial) is unlikely to be worthwhile, but there may be value in a study to estimate the re-graft rates and associated costs in this population.

Highlights

  • Patients with burn injuries may receive a skin graft to achieve healing in a timely manner

  • National Burns Injury database data suggest that 20 to 30% of patients will require further grafting procedures. Some of this graft failure will be due to infection and some due to friction when the graft rubs against other materials

  • Uncertainty in the optimal bedding is assessed by reporting credible intervals around the Expected net benefit (ENB), and by constructing cost-effectiveness acceptability curves (CEACS) to examine the probability that the intervention is costeffective at different levels of willingness to pay

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with burn injuries may receive a skin graft to achieve healing in a timely manner. There are roughly 1000 skin grafts undertaken to achieve healing annually at burns services nationally; 75% in adults and 25% in children [2]. National Burns Injury database (iBID) data suggest that 20 to 30% of patients will require further grafting procedures. Some of this graft failure will be due to infection and some due to friction when the graft rubs against other materials (graft loss because of friction between bedsheets and another material, such as a bedsheet). Graft loss will result in delayed wound healing, increased hospital stay, repeat surgery, further donor sites, increased pain and the potential for infection and increased scar formation; impacting negatively on UK National Health Service (NHS) costs

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