| Literature DB >> 29073928 |
Mark A Barone1, Zuhura Mbuguni2, Japhet Ominde Achola3, Carmela Cordero4, Joseph Kanama5, Projestine S Muganyizi6, Jamilla Mwanga5, Caitlin Shannon4, Leopold Tibyehabwa5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Female sterilization by tubal ligation is a safe, extremely effective, and permanent way to limit childbearing. It is the most popular modern contraceptive method worldwide. The simplest way to provide tubal ligation is by a procedure called minilaparotomy, generally performed with the client under local anesthesia with systemic sedation and analgesia. In Tanzania, unmet need for family planning is high and has declined little in the past decade. Access to tubal ligation is limited throughout the country, in large part because of a lack of trained providers. Clinical officers (COs) are midlevel health workers who provide diagnosis, treatment, and minor surgeries. They are more prevalent than physicians in poorer and rural communities. Task shifting-the delegation of some tasks to less-specialized health workers, including task shifting of surgical procedures to midlevel cadres-has improved access to lifesaving interventions in resource-limited settings. It is a cost-effective way to address shortages of physicians, increasing access to services. The primary objective of this trial is to establish whether the safety of tubal ligation by minilaparotomy provided by COs is noninferior to the safety of tubal ligation by minilaparotomy provided by physicians (assistant medical officers [AMOs]), as measured by rates of major adverse events (AEs) during the procedure and through 42 days of follow-up. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Minilaparotomy; Noninferiority randomized controlled trial; Task shifting; Tubal ligation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29073928 PMCID: PMC5658910 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2235-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Trial profile
Definitions and statistical methods for analyzing primary and secondary outcomes
| Outcome | Specific measurement | Metric | Method of aggregation | Time point for measurement | Method of analysis for difference between COs and AMOs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome | |||||
| Major AEs | AEs graded according to predefined criteria ( | Presence of major AEs | Five-level ordinal categorical measure of AE severity, grouped as major (IIIa–V) or minor (I and II) | During the tubal ligation procedure and through 42 days of follow-up | Chi-square test |
| Secondary outcomes | |||||
| Major and minor AEs at different time points during the study | AEs graded according to predefined criteria ( | Presence of major or minor AEs | Five-level ordinal categorical measure of AE severity, grouped as major (IIIa–V) or minor (I and II). | ▪ Intraoperatively | Chi-square test. |
| Performance: procedure time | Time to event in minutes | Difference between procedure end time and start time | Continuous measure reported as mean procedure time | Intraoperatively | Independent sample |
| Performance: difficulties performing procedures | Yes/no | Reported occurrence | Categorical measure of proportion of occurrence | Chi-square test | |
| Performance: inability to complete procedure | Yes/no | Reported occurrence | Categorical measure of proportion of occurrence | Chi-square test | |
| Performance: need for assistance to complete procedure | Yes/no | Reported occurrence | Categorical measure of proportion of occurrence | Chi-square test | |
| Performance: maximum reported pain experienced by participant during procedure | Visual analogue scale (0 = no pain, 10 = worst possible pain) | Reported level of pain | Continuous measure reported as mean pain score | Independent sample | |
| Participant satisfaction with tubal ligation | Rating scale | Reported level of satisfaction | Four-category ordinal value (very satisfied, somewhat satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied) | Day 3 and day 42 follow-up visits | Ordinal logistic regression |
| Self-efficacy of providers in performing tubal ligation by minilaparotomy | Self-administered confidence scale | Reported level of confidence | Continuous measure with higher value indicating greater level of confidence | At completion of recruitment | Independent sample |
| Self-administered comfort scale | Reported level of comfort | Continuous measure with higher value indicating greater level of comfort | Independent sample | ||
| Self-administered self-efficacy questionnaire adapted from the General Self-Efficacy Scale | Reported level of self-efficacy | Continuous measure with higher value indicating greater level of self-efficacy | Independent sample | ||
AE Adverse event
Study sites
| District | Static study site |
|---|---|
| Arusha City | Daraja 2 Health Centre |
| Kaloleni Health Centre | |
| Levolosi Urban Health Centre | |
| Karatu District | Karatu Designated District Hospital |
| Longido District | Longido Health Centre |
| Monduli District | Monduli District Hospital |
| Mto wa Mbu Health Centre |
Reported adverse event rates following tubal ligation by minilaparotomy
| Reference | AEs ( | Sample ( | AE rate | ||
| Chowdhury and Chowdhury, 1975 [ | 7 | 600 | 1.2% | ||
| Fongsri and McDaniel, 1979 [ | 4 | 900 | 0.4% | ||
| Dusitsin et al., 1980 [ | 5 | 292 | 1.7% | ||
| Koetsawang et al., 1981 [ | 37 | 1376 | 2.7% | ||
| Satyapan et al., 1983 [ | 82 | 3549 | 2.3% | ||
| Kanchanasinith et al., 1990 [ | 8 | 820 | 1.0% | ||
| Jack and Chao, 1992 [ | 482 | 5182 | 9.3% | ||
| Ruminjo and Ngugi, 1992 [ | 8 | 1521 | 0.5% | ||
| Ruminjo and Ngugi, 1993 [ | 30 | 1999 | 1.5% | ||
| Cisse et al., 1997 [ | 7 | 800 | 0.9% | ||
| Kidan et al., 2001 [ | 0 | 148 | 0.0% | ||
| Gordon-Maclean et al., 2014 [ | 11 | 518 | 2.1% | ||
| AE rate (weighted average) | Lower limit | Upper limit | |||
| Total | 681 | 17,705 | 3.85% | 3.15% | 4.54% |
| Total excluding Jack and Chao, 1992 [ | 199 | 12,523 | 1.59% | 0.90% | 2.28% |
AE Adverse event
Schedule of enrollment, interventions, and assessments
| Study period | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrollment | Allocation | Postallocation | ||||
| Time pointa | Day 0 | Day 0 | Day 0 | Day 3 | Day 7 | Day 42 |
| Enrollment | ||||||
| Eligibility screen | X | |||||
| Informed consent | X | |||||
| Allocation | X | |||||
| Interventions | ||||||
| Procedure by CO | X | |||||
| Procedure by AMO | X | |||||
| Assessments | ||||||
| Pregnancy test | X | |||||
| Directed physical examination | X | X | X | X | ||
| Adverse events | X | X | X | X | ||
| Interview | X | X | ||||
AMO Assistant medical officer, CO Clinical officer
aIn most cases, screening, enrollment, allocation, and the tubal ligation by minilaparotomy procedure will all be done on the same day (designated as day 0)