| Literature DB >> 32187680 |
S Cousins1,2, N S Blencowe1,2,3, C Tsang1,2, K Chalmers1,2, A Mardanpour1,2, A J Carr4, M K Campbell5, J A Cook4,6, D J Beard4,6, J M Blazeby1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Placebo-controlled trials play an important role in the evaluation of healthcare interventions. However, they can be challenging to design and deliver for invasive interventions, including surgery. In-depth understanding of the component parts of the treatment intervention is needed to ascertain what should, and should not, be delivered as part of the placebo. Assessment of risk to patients and strategies to ensure that the placebo effectively mimics the treatment are also required. To date, no guidance exists for the design of invasive placebo interventions. This study aimed to develop a framework to optimize the design and delivery of invasive placebo interventions in RCTs.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32187680 PMCID: PMC7496319 DOI: 10.1002/bjs.11509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Surg ISSN: 0007-1323 Impact factor: 6.939
Revised typology with potential components of invasive treatment interventions, including co‐interventions
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Anaesthesia | Details of type of anaesthesia delivered to patients, including sedation, local and general anaesthetic |
| Before access to body (in procedure room) | Events associated with surgical intervention occurring before access to body is gained, e.g. patient positioning, skin preparation, hair removal, dressing in surgical scrub |
| Access | Method used to gain access to body. Broadly this can be categorized as incision with cut, through natural orifice or percutaneous puncture |
| Dissection | Process of exposing an organ, tissue or structure |
| Irrigation | Application of any solution across or within an open wound or inside body to achieve wound hydration, remove debris, or assist with visual examination |
| Resection | Removal of all or part of an organ, tissue or structure |
| Haemostasis | Stopping of bleeding or arrest of blood circulation in an organ, tissue or structure |
| Reconstruction | Process of rebuilding, repairing or replacing an organ, tissue or structure. This may include an anastomosis (connection between 2 structures) or insertion of a surgical adjunct such as a mesh or prosthesis |
| Insertion of surgical adjunct | This relates to insertion of surgical adjuncts not related directly to reconstruction, but inserted during surgical procedure (e.g. drains or feeding tubes) |
| Intraoperative diagnosis | Further characterization of disease process or anatomy during surgical procedure (e.g. intraoperative cholangiography, blue dye tests or scintigraphy) |
| Closure/removal of equipment | Process of closing incision(s) or removing equipment from body |
| After skin closure | Any event associated with surgical intervention but undertaken after skin closure (e.g. application of dressings or bandages) |
| Co‐interventions | Any co‐interventions delivered to patients before, during or after invasive intervention |
| Other | Any other component not listed above |
Revised typology components.
Placebo optimization strategies reported in placebo‐controlled RCTs of invasive interventions
| Placebo optimization strategy | No. of RCTs ( | Example – verbatim text from trial article |
|---|---|---|
|
| 54 (69) | |
| Visual masking | 13 (17) | ‘..the blinding of the patient was further ensured by shielding the patients’ view with a vertical drape and aiming the arthroscopy monitors away from the patient's line of vision' |
| Verbal cues | 12 (15) | ‘During the sham procedure, physician investigators were required to talk through the procedure steps to facilitate blinding of the patient. Spoken dialogue during the sham procedure mimicked actual use’ |
| Auditory cues | 11 (14) | ‘Saline was splashed to simulate the sounds of lavage’ |
| Physical cues | 9 (12) | ‘..the endoscope was manipulated for 30 to 40 minutes to simulate the effect of rotations and manipulations on the esophagus’ |
| Visual cues | 5 (6) | ‘Several 1 ml syringes will be filled as for the active group and injection will be simulated’ |
| Auditory masking | 3 (4) | ‘..the patient received over‐the‐ear headphones playing music that ensured auditory isolation and prevented hearing of communication between staff, even before sedation’ |
| Olfactory cues | 2 (3) | ‘..the methacrylate monomer was opened to simulate the odor associated with mixing of PMMA’ |
|
| 37 (47) | ‘The palatal implant insertion tools provided by the manufacturer for the placebo control group did not include the palatal implants, but they were in all other aspects identical to the implant insertion tools used in the treatment group receiving the implant’ |
|
| 26 (33) | ‘The patient was kept in the operation theatre for the amount of time required to perform an actual arthroscopic index shoulder surgery’ |
|
| 11 (14) | ‘Shortly before each intervention the endoscopist was informed about the patient's group assignment. Subsequent contact between the patient and the endoscopist was minimised’ |
|
| 11 (14) | |
| Intervention not specified in patient notes | 9 (12) | A standardized operation description was written in the patients' charts in order to deprive the nursing staff at the hospital of information on the character of the operation' |
| Patient billing delayed or withheld | 2 (3) | ‘Each site will be asked to delay the billing to the subjects in an attempt to keep them blinded as to the procedure they receive. The costs of the vertebroplasty will be billed to the subject's insurance after the one‐month evaluation’ |
|
| 3 (4) | ‘..the catheter was connected to a lead and passed to an independent technician. The technician then opened a sealed envelope to ascertain the randomization schedule and covertly either connected the catheter to the generator (active IDET group) or did not (sham placebo group). Critically, both surgeon and subject were blinded to this step’ |
Numbers in parentheses are percentages.
Figure 1Core stages of the DITTO framework
Worked example showing application of DITTO framework to development of a placebo intervention for appendicectomy
| Typology components | Treatment intervention (appendicectomy) | Placebo intervention |
|---|---|---|
| Anaesthesia | General anaesthetic | General anaesthetic |
| Before access to body (in operating theatre) | Skin preparation, positioning and draping | Skin preparation, positioning and draping |
|
Access | 3 incisions (sizes flexible) | 3 incisions (sizes flexible) |
| Create pneumoperitoneum and inspect intra‐abdominal organs | Create pneumoperitoneum and inspect intra‐abdominal organs | |
| Dissection | Identify appendix | Identify appendix |
| Mobilize appendix and dissect mesoappendix | × | |
| Irrigation | n.a. | n.a. |
| Resection | Ligate base of appendix (stapler or endoloop) | × |
| Remove appendix in bag (optional) | × | |
| Haemostasis | Ligate appendicular artery (using diathermy or clips) | × |
| Check for bleeding | Check for bleeding | |
| Reconstruction | n.a. | n.a. |
| Insertion of surgical adjunct | n.a. | n.a. |
| Intraoperative diagnosis | n.a. | n.a. |
| Closure/removal of equipment | Closure of fascia of port(s) > 5 mm | Closure of fascia of port(s) > 5 mm |
| Subcuticular skin sutures | Subcuticular skin sutures | |
| Infiltration of local anaesthetic (type and amount flexible) | Infiltration of local anaesthetic (type and amount flexible) | |
| After skin closure | Apply dressings (optional) | Apply dressings (optional) |
| Co‐interventions | Urinary catheter (optional) | Urinary catheter (optional) |
| Antibiotics at time of skin incision | Antibiotics at time of skin incision | |
| Intraoperative analgesia and fluids | Intraoperative analgesia and fluids | |
| Postoperative analgesia | Postoperative analgesia | |
| Other | n.a. | n.a. |
|
| ||
| Visual masking | Eye mask while in procedure room and postprocedure recovery room | |
| Auditory masking | Headphones while in procedure room and postprocedure recovery room | |
| Mimicked timings | All patients to spend same length of time in operating theatre, recovery rooms and in hospital after procedure | |
| Restriction of interaction between blinded/unblinded trial persons | Separate healthcare team not present in theatre to look after patients after procedure | |
| Omission of intervention details in patient notes | Operation notes kept in sealed envelope separate to patient's medical records, only to be accessed
in an emergency | |
Critical surgical elements. n.a., Not applicable; ×, treatment step omitted from placebo appendicectomy.
With agreed unblinding protocols in place.