Turnbull Sophie L, Redmond Niamh M, Lucas Patricia, Cabral Christie, Ingram Jenny, Hollinghurst Sandra, Hay Alastair D, Peters Tim J, Horwood Jeremy, Little Paul, Francis Nick, Blair Peter S
Centre for Academic Primary Care, School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMJ Open. 2015 Sep 15;5(9):e008615. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008615.
While most respiratory tract infections (RTIs) will resolve without treatment, many children will receive antibiotics and some will develop severe symptoms requiring hospitalisation. There have been calls for evidence to reduce uncertainty regarding the identification of children who will and will not benefit from antibiotics. The aim of this feasibility trial is to test recruitment and the acceptance of a complex behavioural intervention designed to reduce antibiotic prescribing, and to inform how best to conduct a larger trial.
The CHICO (Children's Cough) trial is a single-centre feasibility cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) comparing a web-based, within-consultation, behavioural intervention with usual care for children presenting to general practitioner practices with RTI and acute cough. The trial aims to recruit at least 300 children between October 2014 and April 2015, in a single area in South West England. Following informed consent, demographic information will be recorded, and symptoms and signs measured. Parents/carers of recruited children will be followed up on a weekly basis to establish symptom duration, resource use and cost of the illness to the parent until the child's cough has resolved or up to 8 weeks, whichever occurs earlier. A review of medical notes, including clinical history, primary care reconsultations and hospitalisations will be undertaken 2 months after recruitment. The trial feasibility will be assessed by: determining acceptability of the intervention to clinicians and parent/carers; quantifying differential recruitment and follow-up; determining intervention fidelity; the success in gathering the data necessary to conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis; and collecting data about antibiotic prescribing rates to inform the sample size needed for a fully powered RCT.
The study was approved by the North West-Haydock Research Ethics Committee, UK (reference number: 14/NW/1034). The findings from this feasibility trial will be disseminated through research conferences and peer-reviewed journals.
ISRCTN23547970.
虽然大多数呼吸道感染(RTIs)无需治疗即可痊愈,但许多儿童会接受抗生素治疗,有些儿童会出现需要住院治疗的严重症状。一直有人呼吁提供证据,以减少在确定哪些儿童会从抗生素治疗中获益以及哪些儿童不会获益方面的不确定性。这项可行性试验的目的是测试招募情况以及一种旨在减少抗生素处方的复杂行为干预措施的可接受性,并为如何开展更大规模的试验提供信息。
CHICO(儿童咳嗽)试验是一项单中心可行性整群随机对照试验(RCT),将基于网络的、会诊期间的行为干预措施与为因RTIs和急性咳嗽前往全科医生诊所就诊的儿童提供的常规护理进行比较。该试验旨在在2014年10月至2015年4月期间在英格兰西南部的一个单一地区招募至少300名儿童。在获得知情同意后,将记录人口统计学信息,并测量症状和体征。对招募儿童的父母/照料者将每周进行随访,以确定症状持续时间、资源使用情况以及疾病给父母造成的费用,直至儿童咳嗽痊愈或最长8周,以先发生者为准。招募后2个月将对医疗记录进行审查,包括临床病史、初级保健复诊和住院情况。试验可行性将通过以下方式进行评估:确定临床医生和父母/照料者对干预措施的可接受性;量化不同的招募和随访情况;确定干预的保真度;成功收集进行成本效益分析所需的数据;以及收集有关抗生素处方率的数据,以为充分有效力的RCT所需的样本量提供信息。
该研究已获得英国西北-海多克研究伦理委员会批准(参考编号:14/NW/1034)。这项可行性试验的结果将通过研究会议和同行评审期刊进行传播。
ISRCTN23547970。