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      Randomised controlled trial of silk therapeutic garments for the management of atopic eczema in children: the CLOTHES trial

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          Abstract

          Background

          Atopic eczema (AE) is a chronic, itchy, inflammatory skin condition that affects the quality of life of children and their families. The role of specialist clothing in the management of AE is poorly understood.

          Objectives

          To assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of silk garments for the management of AE in children with moderate to severe disease.

          Design

          Parallel-group, observer-blind, randomised controlled trial of 6 months’ duration, followed by a 2-month observational period. A nested qualitative study evaluated the beliefs of trial participants, health-care professionals and health-care commissioners about the use of silk garments for AE.

          Setting

          Secondary care and the community in five UK centres.

          Participants

          Children aged 1–15 years with moderate or severe AE.

          Interventions

          Participants were randomised (1 : 1 using online randomisation) to standard care or standard care plus 100% silk garments made from antimicrobially protected knitted sericin-free silk [DermaSilk TM(AlPreTec Srl, San Donà di Piave, Italy) or DreamSkin TM(DreamSkin Health Ltd, Hatfield, UK)]. Three sets of garments were supplied per participant, to be worn for up to 6 months (day and night). At 6 months the standard care group received the garments to use for the remaining 2-month observational period.

          Main outcome measures

          Primary outcome – AE severity using the Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) assessed at 2, 4 and 6 months, by nurses blinded to treatment allocation. EASI scores were log-transformed for analysis. Secondary outcomes – patient-reported eczema symptoms (Patient Oriented Eczema Measure); global assessment of severity (Investigator Global Assessment); quality of life of the child (Atopic Dermatitis Quality of Life, Child Health Utility – 9 Dimensions), family (Dermatitis Family Impact Questionnaire) and main carer (EuroQoL-5 Dimensions-3 Levels); use of standard eczema treatments (e.g. emollients, topical corticosteroids); and cost-effectiveness. The acceptability and durability of the clothing, and adherence to wearing the garments, were assessed by parental/carer self-report. Safety outcomes – number of skin infections and hospitalisations for AE.

          Results

          A total of 300 children were randomised (26 November 2013 to 5 May 2015): 42% female, 79% white, mean age 5 years. The primary analysis included 282 out of 300 (94%) children ( n = 141 in each group). Garments were worn for at least 50% of the time by 82% of participants. Geometric mean EASI scores at baseline, 2, 4 and 6 months were 8.4, 6.6, 6.0, 5.4 for standard care and 9.2, 6.4, 5.8, 5.4 for silk clothing, respectively. There was no evidence of difference between the groups in EASI score averaged over all follow-up visits adjusted for baseline EASI score, age and centre (ratio of geometric means 0.95, 95% confidence interval 0.85 to 1.07; p = 0.43). This confidence interval is equivalent to a difference of –1.5 to 0.5 in the original EASI scale units. Skin infections occurred in 39 out of 141 (28%) and 36 out of 142 (25%) participants for standard care and silk clothing groups, respectively. The incremental cost per QALY of silk garments for children with moderate to severe eczema was £56,811 from a NHS perspective in the base case. Sensitivity analyses supported the finding that silk garments do not appear to be cost-effective within currently accepted thresholds.

          Limitations

          Knowledge of treatment allocation may have affected behaviour and outcome reporting for some of the patient-reported outcomes.

          Conclusions

          The addition of silk garments to standard AE care is unlikely to improve AE severity, or to be cost-effective compared with standard care alone, for children with moderate or severe AE. This trial adds to the evidence base to guide clinical decision-making.

          Future work

          Non-pharmacological interventions for the management of AE remain a research priority among patients.

          Trial registration

          Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN77261365.

          Funding

          This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 21, No. 16. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

          Related collections

          Most cited references48

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          Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Results in Health Science Mixed Methods Research Through Joint Displays.

          Mixed methods research is becoming an important methodology to investigate complex health-related topics, yet the meaningful integration of qualitative and quantitative data remains elusive and needs further development. A promising innovation to facilitate integration is the use of visual joint displays that bring data together visually to draw out new insights. The purpose of this study was to identify exemplar joint displays by analyzing the various types of joint displays being used in published articles.
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            The patient-oriented eczema measure: development and initial validation of a new tool for measuring atopic eczema severity from the patients' perspective.

            To develop a simple, valid, repeatable, and readily understandable patient-oriented assessment measure for monitoring disease activity in children and adults with atopic eczema. Qualitative semistructured patient interviews identified a list of symptoms of atopic eczema. These symptoms were quantitatively analyzed in a larger patient population to identify which symptoms were important to patients and amenable to monitoring as part of a scoring system. The outpatient Department of Dermatology at the Queen's Medical Centre, University Hospital, Nottingham, England, and 5 local general practices. Four hundred thirty-five patients with atopic eczema. Seven symptoms were incorporated into the final patient-oriented eczema measure using a simple 5-point scale of frequency of occurrence during the previous week, with a maximum total score of 28. Validity testing against the Dermatology Life Quality Index, Children's Dermatology Life Quality Index, and patients' global severity assessments showed good correlation (r = 0.78, r = 0.73, and r = 0.81, respectively; P<.001). Internal consistency was high (Cronbach alpha = 0.88), and test-retest reliability was good, with 95% of scores falling within 2.6 points on repeat testing (mean score difference, 0.04; SD, 1.32). Individual variables in the measure demonstrated sensitivity to change during a 4-week in-clinic period and an 18-week randomized controlled clinical trial. The patient-oriented eczema measure is a practical self-assessed measurement tool for monitoring aspects of atopic eczema that are important to patients in routine clinical practice or in the clinical trial setting.
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              The GRIPP checklist: strengthening the quality of patient and public involvement reporting in research.

              The aim of this study was to develop the GRIPP (Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and Public) checklist to enhance the quality of PPI reporting. Thematic analysis was used to synthesize key issues relating to patient and public involvement (PPI) identified in the PIRICOM and PAPIRIS systematic reviews. These issues informed the development of the GRIPP checklist. The key issues identified included limited conceptualization of PPI, poor quality of methods reporting, unclear content validity of studies, poor reporting of context and process, enormous variability in the way impact is reported, little formal evaluation of the quality of involvement, limited focus on negative impacts, and little robust measurement of impact. The GRIPP checklist addresses these key issues. The reporting of patient and public involvement in health research needs significant enhancement. The GRIPP checklist represents the first international attempt to enhance the quality of PPI reporting. Better reporting will strengthen the PPI evidence-base and so enable more effective evaluation of what PPI works, for whom, in what circumstances and why.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Health Technology Assessment
                Health Technol Assess
                National Institute for Health Research
                1366-5278
                2046-4924
                April 2017
                April 2017
                : 21
                : 16
                : 1-260
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Centre of Evidence Based Dermatology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
                [2 ]Nottingham Clinical Trials Unit, University of Nottingham, Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham, UK
                [3 ]Health Economics Group, Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
                [4 ]Faculty of Health Education and Life Sciences, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, UK
                [5 ]Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham, UK
                [6 ]Patient and public involvement representative, Nottingham, UK
                [7 ]Faculty of Science, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK
                [8 ]Research and Enterprise, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK
                [9 ]Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, UK
                [10 ]Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, Barnet Hospital, Barnet, UK
                [11 ]Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust, Queen Alexandra Hospital, Cosham, UK
                [12 ]Isle of Wight NHS Trust, St Mary’s Hospital, Newport, UK
                [13 ]Skin Research Group, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
                [14 ]Department of Dermatology, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, Dundee, UK
                Article
                10.3310/hta21160
                5410632
                28409557
                1b37c55e-0601-4932-a80b-09377e05158d
                © 2017

                Free to read

                http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/non-commercial-government-licence/non-commercial-government-licence.htm

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