Abstract

BackgroundPRESSURE 2 is a randomised evaluation of the clinical and cost-effectiveness of two types of mattress for the prevention of pressure ulcers (PUs). The primary clinical endpoint was time to development of a category ≥2 PU. The current ‘gold standard’ for PU identification is expert clinical assessment. Due to the mattress appearance, a blinded assessment of the endpoint is not possible. This poses a risk to the internal validity of the study. A possible approach is to use photographs of skin sites, with central blinded review. However, there are practical and scientific concerns including patients’ consent to photographs, burden of data collection, photograph quality, data completeness and comparison of photographs to the current ‘gold standard’. This paper reports the findings of the PRESSURE 2 photographic validation sub-study.MethodWhere consent was obtained, photographs were taken of all category ≥2 PUs on the first presentation to assess over-reporting, and for the assessment of under-reporting, a random sample of 10% patients had an assessment by an independent clinical assessor who also photographed two skin sites. The staff were trained in taking and transferring photographs using standardised procedures and equipment. A card included in the photograph recorded participant details and a ‘greyscale’ for correction of white balance during processing. Three blinded reviewers assessed the photographs and rated how confident they were in their assessment.ResultsThe trial recruited 2029 patients; 85% consented to photography, and 532 photographs were received and used in the blinded central review. The level of confidence varied by skin classification with more confidence observed when the skin was assessed as being less severe than a category ≥2 PU. Overall, there was a very good reliability compared to the gold standard expert clinical assessment (87.8%, kappa 0.82).ConclusionStudy findings have usefully informed the scientific and practical issues of blinded assessment of PU status to reducing the risk of bias in medical device trials. The reliability of central blinded expert photography was found to be ‘very good’ (PABAK). Photographs have been found to be an acceptable method of data validation for participants. Methods to improve the quality of photographs would increase the confidence in the assessments.Trial registrationISRCTN Registry ISRCTN01151335. Registered on 19 April 2013

Highlights

  • PRESSURE 2 is a randomised evaluation of the clinical and cost-effectiveness of two types of mattress for the prevention of pressure ulcers (PUs)

  • The level of confidence varied by skin classification with more confidence observed when the skin was assessed as being less severe than a category ≥2 PU

  • There was a very good reliability compared to the gold standard expert clinical assessment (87.8%, kappa 0.82)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

PRESSURE 2 is a randomised evaluation of the clinical and cost-effectiveness of two types of mattress for the prevention of pressure ulcers (PUs). Due to the mattress appearance, a blinded assessment of the endpoint is not possible This poses a risk to the internal validity of the study. PRESSURE 2 was a randomised controlled trial (RCT), evaluating the clinical and cost-effectiveness of two types of pressure-relieving mattress frequently used in pressure ulcer prevention practice [1, 2]. It is recognised that blinding of patients and carers is the ‘Achilles heel’ of most RCTs in wound care [6] Medical devices such as dressings and pressure-relieving equipment used in wound care and PU prevention differ visually such that it is usually impossible to mask participants. While this is possible with a dressing or off-loading device, in most cases, it is not practical or ethical to temporarily move the patient to another mattress for blinded outcome assessment

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call