| Literature DB >> 20070899 |
Eberhard Rabe1, Markus Stücker, Bertram Ottillinger.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Water displacement leg volumetry is a highly reproducible method, allowing the confirmation of efficacy of vasoactive substances. Nevertheless errors of its execution and the selection of unsuitable patients are likely to negatively affect the outcome of clinical studies in chronic venous insufficiency (CVI). DISCUSSION: Placebo controlled double-blind drug studies in CVI were searched (Cochrane Review 2005, MedLine Search until December 2007) and assessed with regard to efficacy (volume reduction of the leg), patient characteristics, and potential methodological error sources. Almost every second study reported only small drug effects (<or= 30 mL volume reduction). As the most relevant error source the conduct of volumetry was identified. Because the practical use of available equipment varies, volume differences of more than 300 mL--which is a multifold of a potential treatment effect--have been reported between consecutive measurements. Other potential error sources were insufficient patient guidance or difficulties with the transition from the Widmer CVI classification to the CEAP (Clinical Etiological Anatomical Pathophysiological) grading.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20070899 PMCID: PMC2820486 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-10-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Studies with venoactive drugs using water displacement leg/foot volumetry as an efficacy endpoint
| First author, year of publ. | Patients | Centres | Drug/Reference (No. of patients with data) | Effect (volume) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVI Grade [I-]* III (Widmer) | Monocentre, hospital. | Calcium dobesilate (n = 15), placebo (n = 15). | -85 mL vs. pbo | Change pre-post 4 mL (pbo) | |
| CVI Grade I-II (Widmer) | Multicentre. | Ruscus + hesperidine-methylchalcone | -47 mL vs. pbo (varicosis) | Change pre-post ca. +30 mL | |
| CVI Grade II | Multicentre, outpatients. | Oxerutin (n = 64), placebo (n = 56); stockings in both groups. | -31 mL vs. pbo | Change pre-post -33 mL (pbo) | |
| CVI Grade I-II | Monocentre, hospital. | Buckwheat herb tea (n = 36), placebo (n = 31). | -78 mL vs. pbo | Change pre-post +110 mL (pbo) SE* ca. 56 mL. | |
| CVI mainly Grade I | Multicentre, hospital. | HCSE (n = 95), placebo (n = 46), | -54 mL vs. pbo | Change pre-post ca. +10 ± 15 mL (mean ± SE; pbo) and -47 ± 8 mL (compression) | |
| CVI Grade I-II | Multicentre, outpatients. | Red vine leaf extract (360 mg: n = 86; 720 mg: n = 84), placebo (n = 87). | -76 and -100 g vs. pbo (360 and 720 mg, respectively) | Change pre-post ca. +34 g (pbo). | |
CVI: Chronic venous insufficiency; SE: Standard error; *: SE estimated from published data on group size and standard deviation; pbo: placebo; CEAP: Clinical Etiological Anatomical Pathophysiological CVI classification; HCSE: Horse chestnut seed extract
Error sources in leg volumetry
| • Positioning of patient during resting and examination |
| • Room and water temperature |
| • Exclusion of superficial venous system with tourniquet |
| • Time of investigation |
| • Volumetry procedures |
| • Centres |
| • Cardiovascular co-morbidity or co-medication |
| • Other co-medication with volume effects |
| • Diagnosis and grade of CVI |
CVI: Chronic venous insufficiency