| Literature DB >> 24422753 |
Robert Hodgson, Richard Allen, Ellen Broderick, J Martin Bland, Jo C Dumville1, Rebecca Ashby, Sally Bell-Syer, Ruth Foxlee, Jill Hall, Karen Lamb, Mary Madden, Susan O'Meara, Nikki Stubbs, Nicky Cullum.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Critical commentaries suggest that wound care randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are often poorly reported with many methodological flaws. Furthermore, interventions in chronic wounds, rather than being drugs, are often medical devices for which there are no requirements for RCTs to bring products to market. RCTs in wounds trials therefore potentially represent a form of marketing. This study presents a methodological overview of chronic wound trials published between 2004 and 2011 and investigates the influence of industry funding on methodological quality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24422753 PMCID: PMC3896781 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Definitions used in assessment
| Primary or main outcomes defined explicitly, or an outcome used in power calculation, or a main outcome described explicitly in primary study objectives | |
| Primary outcomes where defined were classified as complete healing if primary outcome was proportion healed or time to complete healing; surrogate healing if the primary outcome was any other healing-related outcome; and, non-healing if the primary outcome was a non-healing outcome such as presence of infection or pain. | |
| Method described for generating the randomisation sequence used to allocate participants to study groups, including computer-generated sequences, random number tables, and coin tosses | |
| Method described to prevent the individual responsible for enrolling trial participants from knowing or predicting the allocation sequence in advance, including central randomisation or sealed, opaque, sequentially numbered envelopes | |
| Outcome assessors had no knowledge of the participants’ group allocation or it was judged that the outcome and the outcome measurement was unlikely to be influenced by lack of blinding (for example, mortality). | |
| - Low risk of bias: Study was at low risk of bias in all three domains. | |
Figure 1Overview of review process.
General characteristics of included studies
| | | | | |
| General medical | 11 (6.6%) | 3 (4.8%) | 4 (13%) | 2 (3.5%) |
| Wounds specialty | 57 (34%) | 26 (41%) | 10 (32%) | 13 (23%) |
| Non-wounds specialty | 99 (59%) | 34 (54%) | 17 (55%) | 42 (74%) |
| | | | | |
| Median (IQ range) | 1.93 (1.21 to 3.01) | 2.38 (1.26 to 3.21) | 1.63 (1.36 to 2.48) | 1.48 (0.799 to 2.90) |
| | | | | |
| Commercial | 58 (35%) | 24 (38%) | 7 (23%) | 16 (28%) |
| Mixed | 10 (6.0%) | 3 (4.8%) | 2 (6.5%) | 5 (8.8%) |
| Non-commercial | 55 (33%) | 20 (32%) | 14 (45%) | 16 (28%) |
| Unclear/not reported | 44 (26%) | 16 (25%) | 8 (26%) | 20 (35%) |
| | | | | |
| Other | | | | |
| Parallel | 160 (96%) | 58 (92%) | 30 (97%) | 56 (98%) |
| 7 (4.2%) | 5 (7.9%) | 1 (3.2%) | 1 (1.8%) | |
| | | | | |
| 2 | 144 (90%) | 52 (90%) | 27(90%) | 51 (91%) |
| 3 | 14 (8.8%) | 6 (10%) | 2 (6.7%) | 4 (7.0%) |
| 4+ | 2 (1.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (3.3%) | 1 (1.8%) |
| | | | | |
| Bandages/stockings | 14 (8.4%) | 14 (22%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Dressings/topical Agents | 42 (25%) | 20 (32%) | 10 (32%) | 10 (18%) |
| Drugs | 33 (20%) | 8 (13%) | 4 (13%) | 16 (28%) |
| Growth factors | 16 (9.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 13 (23%) |
| Tissue grafts | 11 (6.6%) | 4 (6.3%) | 1 (3.2%) | 5 (8.8%) |
| Other | 51 (31%) | 17 (27%) | 16(52%) | 13(23%) |
| | | | | |
| Placebo | 50 (30%) | 14 (22%) | 12 (39%) | 18 (32%) |
| Usual/standard Care | 43 (26%) | 20 (32%) | 8 (26%) | 12 (21%) |
| Named comparison | 74 (44%) | 29 (46%) | 11 (35%) | 27 (47%) |
aParallel trials only.
Methodological characteristics of included studies
| | | | | |
| Overall | 60 (35 to 99) | 81 (43 to 126) | 44 (26 to 60) | 50 (30 to 86) |
| Per treatment arm | 28 (16 to 47) | 37 (21 to 62) | 21 (7 to 30) | 27 (15 to 43) |
| | | | | |
| All | 2.8 (1.6 to 5.6) | 3.0 (2.8 to 6.0) | 1.9 (0.9 to 3.3) | 3.0 (1.4 to 4.7) |
| PO: Complete healing | 5.6 (3.0 to 6.1) | 6 (3.0 to 12) | 3.9 (1.3 to 6) | 4.7 (4.7 to 5.6) |
| PO: Surrogate healing | 2.8 (1.7 to 3.7) | 2.8 (1.9 to 3.0) | 1.6 (0.93 to 2.8) | 1.9 (1.1 to 3.4) |
| PO: Nonhealing | 1.7 (1.4 to 2.1) | 1.9 (1.6 to 36) | 1.4 (1.4 to 1.4) | 1.9 (1.4 to 3.9) |
| PO: Not defined | 2.8 (1.3 to 4.3) | 3 (1.6 to 5.6) | 1.8 (0.85 to 3.0) | 2.8 (0.93 to 3.7) |
| | | | | |
| Complete Healing | 40 (24%) | 18 (29%) | 4 (13%) | 16 (28%) |
| Surrogate Healing | 47 (28%) | 15 (24%) | 14 (45%) | 12 (21%) |
| Non-healing | 11 (6.6%) | 3 (4.8%) | 1 (3.2%) | 6 (11%) |
| None | 69 (41%) | 27 (43%) | 12 (39%) | 23 (40%) |
| | | | | |
| Low RoB | 67 (40%) | 27 (43%) | 15 (48%) | 19 (33%) |
| Unclear RoB | 98 (59%) | 36 (57% | 15 (48%) | 37 (65%) |
| High RoB | 2 (1.2%) | 0 (0.0)% | 1 (3.2%) | 1 (1.6%) |
| | | | | |
| Low RoB | 41 (25%) | 22 (35%) | 5 (16%) | 11 (19%) |
| Unclear RoB | 123 (74%) | 41 (65%) | 24 (77%) | 45 (80%) |
| High RoB | 3 (1.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (6.5%) | 1 (1.6%) |
| | | | | |
| Low RoB | 56 (34%) | 13 (21%) | 15 (48%) | 23 (40%) |
| Unclear RoB | 64 (38%) | 24 (38%) | 13 (42%) | 22 (39%) |
| High RoB | 47 (28%) | 26 (41%) | 3 (9.7%) | 12 (21%) |
| | | | | |
| Low RoB | 10 (6.0%) | 4 (6.3%) | 2 (6.5%) | 3 (5.3%) |
| Unclear RoB | 107 (64%) | 33 (52%) | 24 (77%) | 41 (72%) |
| High RoB | 50 (30%) | 26 (41%) | 5 (16%) | 13 (23%) |
PO, primary outcome; RoB, risk of bias.
Methodological characteristics of included studies by funding type
| | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| | | | |
| Overall | 63 (40 to 117) | 52 (28 to 91) | 60 (29 to 98) |
| Per treatment arm | 30 (18 to 51) | 26 (14 to 44) | 23 (14 to 41) |
| | | | |
| Overall | 2.8 (1.9 to 5.6) | 3.0 (1.9 to 6.0) | 2.0 (1.2 to 3.5) |
| | | | |
| Complete healing | 17 (25%) | 15 (27%) | 8 (18%) |
| Surrogate healing | 26 (38%) | 11 (20%) | 10 (23%) |
| Non-healing | 5 (7.4) | 4 (7.3%) | 2 (4.5%) |
| None | 20 (29%) | 25 (45%) | 24 (55%) |
| | | | |
| Low RoB | 23 (34%) | 31 (56%) | 14 (32%) |
| Unclear RoB | 43 (63%) | 24 (44%) | 30 (68%) |
| High RoB | 2 (2.9%) | 0 (0.0)% | 0 (0.0%) |
| | | | |
| Low RoB | 21 (31%) | 13 (24%) | 7 (16%) |
| Unclear RoB | 45 (66%) | 41 (75%) | 37 (84%) |
| High RoB | 2 (2.9%) | 1 (1.8%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| | | | |
| Low RoB | 23 (34%) | 23 (42%) | 10 (23%) |
| Unclear RoB | 19 (28%) | 20 (36%) | 25 (57%) |
| High RoB | 26 (38%) | 12 (22%) | 9 (20%) |
| | | | |
| Low RoB | 3 (4.4%) | 5 (9.1%) | 2 (4.5%) |
| Unclear RoB | 37 (54%) | 37 (67%) | 33 (75%) |
| High RoB | 28 (41%) | 13 (24%) | 9 (20%) |
RoB, risk of bias.