| Literature DB >> 22839453 |
Rebecca L Ashby1, Jo C Dumville, Marta O Soares, Elizabeth McGinnis, Nikki Stubbs, David J Torgerson, Nicky Cullum.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is widely promoted as a treatment for full thickness wounds; however, there is a lack of high-quality research evidence regarding its clinical and cost effectiveness. A trial of NPWT for the treatment of grade III/IV pressure ulcers would be worthwhile but premature without assessing whether such a trial is feasible. The aim of this pilot randomised controlled trial was to assess the feasibility of conducting a future full trial of NPWT for the treatment of grade III and IV pressure ulcers and to pilot all aspects of the trial.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22839453 PMCID: PMC3533804 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-13-119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Pressure Ulcer Grading System (according to the European Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel Grading System [[15]])
| Grade 1 | Non-blanching erythema of intact skin. Discoloration of the skin, |
|---|---|
| Grade 2 | Partial thickness skin loss involving the epidermis, dermis or both. |
| Grade 3 | Full thickness skin loss involving damage to or necrosis of |
| Grade 4 | Extensive destruction, tissue necrosis or damage to muscle, |
*At the time that this pilot trial was conducted, pressure ulcers were referred to as grades by the European Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel. They are now classified as categories and stages, e.g. category/stage IV: full thickness tissue loss [16].
Patient data collected at baseline
| Date of birth, gender | |
|---|---|
| | Current location of patient, |
| | Hospital speciality where patient was being treated (current inpatients only) |
| | Date of hospital admission (current inpatients only) |
| | Grade of reference pressure ulcer |
| | Location of reference pressure ulcer |
| | Reference pressure ulcer dimensions (width, length and depth) |
| | |
| | Duration of reference pressure ulcer |
| | Time since the development of first pressure ulcer |
| | Current number of grade I/II and III/IV pressure ulcers |
| Presence/absence of infection of the reference ulcer; if present, how infection was assessed | |
| | Presence/absence of osteomyelitis |
| Presence of incontinence, cardiovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease, diabetes, arthritis, orthopaedic, airway, neurological stroke, cancer or other co-morbidities | |
| Indifferent to treatment allocation, prefer NPWT or prefer standard care | |
| Pressure ulcer-related pain (24 hour recall) using a 10 cm visual analogue scale | |
| EQ-5D questionnaire |
Data collection process for recruitment data collected during the trial
| Number of participants with grade III or IV pressure ulcers who can be recruited to a trial of NPWT compared with standard care from acute and primary care in one city (population 715,000) over a 12-month recruitment period | During pre-trial screening on pre-trial screening forms |
Data collection processes for outcome data collected during the trial
| Length of follow-up for trial participants | The length of time each group participated in the trial was calculated as the difference between date of randomisation and date of trial exit |
| Frequency of attrition and reasons for attrition | Recorded if participant was lost to follow-up on the participant event form |
| Rates of hospital admission and discharge destinations | Date and details of inpatient hospital admission and discharge ecorded as they occurred and recorded on the participant event form |
| Collection of healing data from trial participants | The date the research nurse considered the reference ulcer to have healed was recorded on the participant event form. The time to healing was calculated as the difference between the date of randomisation and the date of healing. Once the reference pressure ulcer was considered to have healed, photographs were taken on the day of healing and then once per week for 3 weeks (so four healing photographs in total) |
| Blinded outcome assessment of wounds | At the end of the trial, a Tissue Viability Clinical expert (blinded to participant treatment allocation) visually inspected baseline, monthly and healing photographs of the reference pressure ulcer. For each series of photos, the assessor was required to state whether they considered the reference pressure ulcer to have healed, the treatment allocation and whether the quality of the photograph was adequate to make a decision about healing |
| Number of participants who would require translation of trial documentation | During pre-trial screening on pre-trial screening forms |
| Measurement of ulcer-related pain at dressing change and health-related quality of life data | Ulcer-related pain was measured on a 10-cm visual analogue scale that ranged from no pain to the worst pain imaginable. This was recorded on treatment monitoring forms pre- and post-application of dressing |
| | Participants were asked to complete the EQ-5D HR-QoL questionnaire at baseline and 2 weeks, 1, 3 and 6 months post-randomisation. Any difficulties participants had with completing these were noted by the research nurse |
| Nurses’ views data collection | Face-to-face and telephone meetings took place with the research nurse who would provide feedback from nurses on any problems they encountered with completing trial documentation |
Data collection processes for treatment data collected during the trial
| Frequency of dressing changes in both trial arms | This was calculated from the number of treatment monitoring forms completed by the research nurses indicating a dressing change and included forms completed both prospectively and retrospectively |
| | Such data were collected retrospectively when a participant changed location or was self-caring. In such instances, the research nurse would consult patient notes or records kept by the patient to determine the number of dressing changes over a specified period of time |
| Duration of treatment with allocated trial treatment | Calculated as the difference between the date a patient receiving their allocated treatment to the date they stopped receiving this treatment. This information was available from treatment monitoring forms (as described above) |
| Reasons for ceasing allocated trial treatment | When, in the clinical judgement of the nurses, a patient could no longer receive their allocated trial treatment, the reason for treatment change was recorded on a treatment monitoring form |
| Define common adverse events in the study population | All serious and non-serious adverse events that occurred in participants were recorded on adverse events forms. The nature, description and relationship of the event to trial treatment were recorded. The research nurse indicated whether the event was considered to be related to the reference pressure ulcer |
The data processes that were devised to answer the research questions formulated to meet the objectives of the study are shown, as are how and where these data were collected.
Trial data and data collected
| Number of participants recruited over 12 months | Number of participating centres required |
| Duration of recruitment period | |
| Eligibility criteria | |
| Time to healing of participants’ pressure ulcers | Duration of follow-up required and sample size |
| Number of participants who withdraw from the study or die before study completion or who are lost to follow-up | Initial sample size |
| Whether attrition is likely to threaten the validity of a future trial (due to attrition bias) | |
| Reasons for withdrawal | Strategies to anticipate and minimise withdrawals |
| Rates of hospital admission, discharge, destinations | Which settings should be involved and how to ensure continuity of data collection |
| Photographs of pressure ulcers | Whether camera phones can be used to monitor healing in real time and whether photographs are adequate for blinded outcome assessment |
| Time of ulcer healing | Can assessment of healing be undertaken by blinded assessors from photographs? |
| Preferred language of (potential) participants | What proportion of future participants is likely to require translation of documentation into which languages? |
| Pain and health-related quality of life | Are the visual analogue scale (VAS) and EQ-5D questionnaire suitable in this population? |
| Nurses’ views of trial documentation | How can we optimise the data collection for a full trial to ensure completion by NHS staff? |
| Frequency of dressing changes | Resource use and structure of data collection tool |
| Time to change to treatment/nature of change to treatment and reasons | Resource use and structure of data collection tool |
| Adverse events (rates and nature) | Cost effectiveness and future data collection |
Figure 1 Flow of participants through the trial.
Baseline demographics and clinical characteristics of trial participants
| Gender ( | 5 male, 7 female |
| Age* | 67.5 (54.5 to 82.0) years |
| Care setting ( | 3 acute: general ward ( |
| | 9 community: patient’s home ( |
| Reference ulcer grade | Grade III ( |
| | Grade IV ( |
| Reference ulcer location: | |
| Heel ( | 1 |
| Trochanter ( | 1 |
| Sacrum ( | 5 |
| Buttocks/gluteal ( | 3 |
| Ischial ( | 2 |
| Pressure ulcer dimensions: | |
| Width* | 3.0 (2.0 to 3.8) cm |
| Depth* | 4.0 (2.2 to 6.5) cm |
| Length* | 5.0 (4.0 to 7.2) cm |
| Duration of reference ulcer* | 4.0 (2.2 to 28.5) months |
| Time elapsed since development of first pressure ulcer* | 24.0 (3.0 to 144.0) months |
| Number of patients with an infected reference ulcer ( | 0 |
| Number of patients with osteomyelitis ( | 0 |
| Number of patients who had a previous pressure ulcer at the same location as the current reference ulcer ( | 3 |
| Number of co-morbidities ( | 2.5 (2.0 to 5.0) |
| Number of patients with grade I/II pressure ulcer(s) in addition to the reference pressure ulcer ( | 0 grade I/II ( |
| | 1 grade I/II ( |
| | 3 grade I/II ( |
| | Not recorded ( |
| Number of grade III/IV pressure ulcer(s) in patients ( | 1 grade III/IV pressure ulcer ( |
| | 2 grade III/IV pressure ulcers ( |
| | 3 grade III/IV pressure ulcers ( |
| | 4 grade III/IV pressure ulcers ( |
| Treatment preference | Prefer NPWT ( |
| | Prefer SC ( |
| | No preference ( |
| Number of patients able to complete the visual analogue pain scale ( | 9 |
| Visual analogue pain scale score* | 0.6 (0.2 to 3.9) cm |
*Data are presented as median and 25th to 75th centiles.
Baseline frequency of co-morbidities in trial participants
| Faecal incontinence | 4 | Faecal incontinence | 3 |
| Myocardial infarction | 3 | Multiple sclerosis | 2 |
| Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus | 3 | Spinal injury | 2 |
| Angina | 2 | Urinary incontinence | 1 |
| Heart failure | 2 | Other cardiovascular disease | 1 |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 2 | Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus | 1 |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary airways/pulmonary disease | 2 | Femoral neck fracture | 1 |
| Stroke | 2 | Chronic obstructive pulmonary airways/pulmonary disease | 1 |
| Urinary incontinence | 1 | Other neurological | 2 |
| Ischaemia (leg/foot) | 1 | Myocardial infarction | 0 |
| Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus | 1 | Angina | 0 |
| Multiple sclerosis | 1 | Heart failure | 0 |
| Other | 1 (lymphoedema) | Ischaemia (leg/foot) | 0 |
| Other cardiovascular disease | 0 | Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus | 0 |
| Femoral neck fracture | 0 | Rheumatoid arthritis | 0 |
| Spinal injury | 0 | Stroke | 0 |
| Other neurological | 0 | Other | 0 |
Co-morbidities are ranked in order of descending frequency in each treatment group.
Adverse events according to treatment group
| - | - | |
| Death | 2 | - |
| Admission to hospital | 1 | 3 |
| Other medically important condition | - | 1 |
| Persistent/significant disability/incapacity | - | - |
| Life-threatening risk (immediate risk of death) | - | - |
| Participants cannot provide on-going consent | - | - |
| Systemic infection/sepsis | - | - |
| Osteomyelitis | 1 | - |
| - | - | |
| Wound infection | 2 | 1 |
| Skin damage | - | 1 |
| Wound bleeding | - | - |
| Breakdown of wound following closure surgery | - | - |
| Pain | 1 | - |
| Recurrence of pressure ulcer (grade II or above) at site of reference pressure ulcer | - | - |
| New pressure ulcer (grade II or above) | - | - |
| Other event* | 9 | 6 |
*Details of these are provided in Table 10.
Details of non-serious adverse events classified as ‘other’ and research nurses’ classification as to whether the event was considered to be related to the reference pressure ulcer
| Deterioration of reference pressure ulcer | |
| Increase in size/depth of reference pressure ulcer | |
| Unable to remove Versafoam from wound* | |
| Review of adverse event: removal of Versafoam* | |
| Patient fell over VAC tubing and was unable to get off floor* | |
| Increase in bleeding, wound malodorous and macerated to wound border | |
| Chest infection | |
| Urinary tract infection | |
| Generally unwell | |
| Review of adverse event (Versafoam in ulcer)* |
*These non-serious adverse events were also considered to be definitely related to the trial treatment, as shown in Table 11.
Adverse events and their relationship to trial treatment
| | ||||||
| Death | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Admission to hospital | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Wound infection | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Pain | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other event | 5 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 0 |