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What should be included in case report forms? Development and application of novel methods to inform surgical study design: a mixed methods case study in parastomal hernia prevention

Authors :
Charlotte Murkin
Leila Rooshenas
Neil Smart
I R Daniels
Tom Pinkney
Jamshed Shabbir
Timothy Rockall
Joanne Bennett
Jared Torkington
Jonathan Randall
H T Brandsma
Barnaby Reeves
Jane Blazeby
Natalie S Blencowe
Source :
Murkin, C E, Rooshenas, L, Smart, N, Daniels, R, Pinkney, T, Shabbir, J, Rockall, T, Bennett, J, Torkington, J, Randall, J K, Brandsma, HT, Reeves, B C, Blazeby, J & Blencowe, N S 2022, ' What should be included in case report forms? Development and application of novel methods to inform surgical study design : a mixed methods case study in parastomal hernia prevention ', BMJ Open, vol. 12, no. 10, e061300 . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061300
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ, 2022.

Abstract

ObjectivesTo describe the development and application of methods to optimise the design of case report forms (CRFs) for clinical studies evaluating surgical procedures, illustrated with an example of abdominal stoma formation.Design(1) Literature reviews, to identify reported variations in surgical components of stoma formation, were supplemented by (2) intraoperative qualitative research (observations, videos and interviews), to identify unreported variations used in practice to generate (3) a ‘long list’ of items, which were rationalised using (4) consensus methods, providing a pragmatic list of CRF items to be captured in the Cohort study to Investigate the Prevention of parastomal HERnias (CIPHER) study.SettingTwo secondary care surgical centres in England.ParticipantsPatients undergoing stoma formation, surgeons undertaking stoma formation and stoma nurses.Outcome measuresSuccessful identification of key CRF items to be captured in the CIPHER study.Results59 data items relating to stoma formation were identified and categorised within six themes: (1) surgical approach to stoma formation; (2) trephine formation; (3) reinforcing the stoma trephine with mesh; (4) use of the stoma as a specimen extraction site; (5) closure of other wounds during the procedure; and (6) spouting the stoma.ConclusionsThis study used multimodal data collection to understand and capture the technical variations in stoma formation and design bespoke CRFs for a multicentre cohort study. The CIPHER study will use the CRFs to examine associations between the technical variations in stoma formation and risks of developing a parastomal hernia.Trial registration numberISRCTN17573805.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2758202145f7f40a5f0c9122ab823623
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061300