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Bluebelle pilot randomised controlled trial of three wound dressing strategies to reduce surgical site infection in primary surgical wounds

Authors :
Cathy Winter
Joanna Coast
Danya Bakhbakhi
Dimitrios Siassakos
Nicky J Welton
Benjamin E Byrne
Leila Rooshenas
Jane M Blazeby
Natalie Jackson
Richard Lovegrove
Christel McMullan
Barnaby C Reeves
Natalie S Blencowe
Jane Blazeby
Rachael Gooberman-Hill
Lucy Ellis
Jo C Dumville
Tim Draycott
Anne Pullyblank
Elizabeth Armstrong
Rhiannon Macefield
Lazaros Andronis
Kate Ashton
Madeleine Clout
Daisy Elliott
Rosie Harris
Caroline Pope
Sean Strong
Helen Talbot
Muhammad Atif
Barry Main
Jessica Thrush
Julie Wollaston
Karen Bobruk
Louise Flintoff
Joanna Nicklin
Jo Chambers
Katy Chalmers
Andrew D Torrance
Thomas D Pinkney
Jonathan M Mathers
Robert J Longman
Jenny L Donovan
Melanie J Calvert
Tom Milne
Benjamin R Waterhouse
William Seligman
Lloyd Rickard
Samir Pathak
Anwar Owais
Jamie O'Callaghan
Stephen O'Brien
Khaldoun Nadi
Charlotte Murkin
Tonia Munder
David Messenger
Matthew Mason
Morwena Marshall
Jessica Lloyd
Jeffrey Lim
Kathryn Lee
Vijay Korwar
Daniel Hughes
George Hill
Mohammed Hamdan
Hannah Gould Brown
Caroline Fryer
Simon Davey
David Cotton
Oliver D Brown
Katarzyna D Bera
Joanne Bennett
Richard Bamford
Piriyankan Ananthavarathan
Rebecca Houlihan
Helen Cheshire
Suriya Kirkpatrick
Louise Solomon
Alice Jarvie
Clementine Skilton
Susan Hughes
Michelle Mayer
Jade Knowlden
Mary Alvarez
Sherrie Villis
Kelly Hollier
Victoria Hardy
David Tyrell
Sharon Garner
Arlo Whitehouse
Caroline Alton
Katrina Hurley
David Hutton
Trudie Young
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

Objective Surgical site infection (SSI) affects up to 25% of primary surgical wounds. Dressing strategies may influence SSI risk. The Bluebelle study assessed the feasibility of a multicentre randomised controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of different dressing strategies to reduce SSI in primary surgical wounds.Design A pilot, factorial RCT.Setting Five UK hospitals.Participants Adults undergoing abdominal surgery with a primary surgical wound.Interventions Participants were randomised to ‘simple dressing’, ‘glue-as-a-dressing’ or ‘no dressing’, and to the time at which the treatment allocation was disclosed to the surgeon (disclosure time, before or after wound closure).Primary and secondary outcome measures Feasibility outcomes focused on recruitment, adherence to randomised allocations, reference assessment of SSI and response rates to participant-completed and observer-completed questionnaires to assess SSI (proposed primary outcome for main trial), wound experience and symptoms, and quality of life (EQ-5D-5L).Results Between March and November 2016, 1115 patients were screened; 699 (73.4%) were eligible and approached, 415 (59.4%) consented and 394 (35.3%) were randomised (simple dressing=133, glue=129 and ‘no dressing’=132). Non-adherence to dressing allocation was 2% (3/133), 6% (8/129) and 15% (20/132), respectively. Adherence to disclosure time was 99% and 86% before and after wound closure, respectively. The overall rate of SSI (reference assessment) was 18.1% (51/281). Response rates to the Wound Healing Questionnaire and other questionnaires ranged from >90% at 4 days to 68% at 4–8 weeks.Conclusions A definitive RCT of dressing strategies including ‘no dressing’ is feasible. Further work is needed to optimise questionnaire response rates.Trial registration number 49328913; Pre-results.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6cc7121ee424d27908db8c8becd9787
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030615