Cargando…

Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia

OBJECTIVES: This mixed-methods feasibility study aimed to explore parents’ and medical practitioners’ views on the acceptability and design of a clinical trial to determine whether routine prophylactic proton pump inhibitors (PPI) reduce the incidence of anastomotic stricture in infants with oesopha...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mitchell, Tracy Karen, Hall, Nigel J, Yardley, Iain, Cole, Christina, Hardy, Pollyanna, King, Andy, Murray, David, Nuthall, Elizabeth, Roehr, Charles, Stanbury, Kayleigh, Williams, Rachel, Pearce, John, Woolfall, Kerry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37080617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066070
_version_ 1785029792477741056
author Mitchell, Tracy Karen
Hall, Nigel J
Yardley, Iain
Cole, Christina
Hardy, Pollyanna
King, Andy
Murray, David
Nuthall, Elizabeth
Roehr, Charles
Stanbury, Kayleigh
Williams, Rachel
Pearce, John
Woolfall, Kerry
author_facet Mitchell, Tracy Karen
Hall, Nigel J
Yardley, Iain
Cole, Christina
Hardy, Pollyanna
King, Andy
Murray, David
Nuthall, Elizabeth
Roehr, Charles
Stanbury, Kayleigh
Williams, Rachel
Pearce, John
Woolfall, Kerry
author_sort Mitchell, Tracy Karen
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: This mixed-methods feasibility study aimed to explore parents’ and medical practitioners’ views on the acceptability and design of a clinical trial to determine whether routine prophylactic proton pump inhibitors (PPI) reduce the incidence of anastomotic stricture in infants with oesophageal atresia (OA). DESIGN: Semi-structured interviews with UK parents of an infant with OA and an online survey, telephone interviews and focus groups with clinicians. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis and descriptive statistics. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: We interviewed 18 parents of infants with OA. Fifty-one clinicians (49 surgeons, 2 neonatologists) from 20/25 (80%) units involved in OA repair completed an online survey and 10 took part in 1 of 2 focus groups. Interviews were conducted with two clinicians whose survey responses indicated they had concerns about the trial. OUTCOME MEASURES: Parents and clinicians ranked the same top four outcomes (‘Severity of anastomotic stricture’, ‘Incidence of anastomotic stricture’, ‘Need for treatment of reflux’ and ‘Presence of symptoms of reflux’) as important to measure for the proposed trial. RESULTS: All parents and most clinicians found the use, dose and duration of omeprazole as the intervention medication, and the placebo control, as acceptable. Parents stated they would hypothetically consent to their child’s participation in the trial. Concerns of a few parents and clinicians about infants suffering with symptomatic reflux, and the impact of this for study retention, appeared to be alleviated through the symptomatic reflux treatment pathway. Hesitant clinician views appeared to change through discussion of parental support for the study and by highlighting existing research that questions current practice of PPI treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that parents and most clinicians view the proposed Treating Oesophageal Atresia with prophylactic proton pump inhibitors to prevent STricture (TOAST) trial to be feasible and acceptable so long as infants can be given PPI if clinicians deem it clinically necessary. This insight into parent and clinician views and concerns will inform pilot phase trial monitoring, staff training and the development of the trial protocol.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10124212
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101242122023-04-25 Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia Mitchell, Tracy Karen Hall, Nigel J Yardley, Iain Cole, Christina Hardy, Pollyanna King, Andy Murray, David Nuthall, Elizabeth Roehr, Charles Stanbury, Kayleigh Williams, Rachel Pearce, John Woolfall, Kerry BMJ Open Paediatrics OBJECTIVES: This mixed-methods feasibility study aimed to explore parents’ and medical practitioners’ views on the acceptability and design of a clinical trial to determine whether routine prophylactic proton pump inhibitors (PPI) reduce the incidence of anastomotic stricture in infants with oesophageal atresia (OA). DESIGN: Semi-structured interviews with UK parents of an infant with OA and an online survey, telephone interviews and focus groups with clinicians. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis and descriptive statistics. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: We interviewed 18 parents of infants with OA. Fifty-one clinicians (49 surgeons, 2 neonatologists) from 20/25 (80%) units involved in OA repair completed an online survey and 10 took part in 1 of 2 focus groups. Interviews were conducted with two clinicians whose survey responses indicated they had concerns about the trial. OUTCOME MEASURES: Parents and clinicians ranked the same top four outcomes (‘Severity of anastomotic stricture’, ‘Incidence of anastomotic stricture’, ‘Need for treatment of reflux’ and ‘Presence of symptoms of reflux’) as important to measure for the proposed trial. RESULTS: All parents and most clinicians found the use, dose and duration of omeprazole as the intervention medication, and the placebo control, as acceptable. Parents stated they would hypothetically consent to their child’s participation in the trial. Concerns of a few parents and clinicians about infants suffering with symptomatic reflux, and the impact of this for study retention, appeared to be alleviated through the symptomatic reflux treatment pathway. Hesitant clinician views appeared to change through discussion of parental support for the study and by highlighting existing research that questions current practice of PPI treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that parents and most clinicians view the proposed Treating Oesophageal Atresia with prophylactic proton pump inhibitors to prevent STricture (TOAST) trial to be feasible and acceptable so long as infants can be given PPI if clinicians deem it clinically necessary. This insight into parent and clinician views and concerns will inform pilot phase trial monitoring, staff training and the development of the trial protocol. BMJ Publishing Group 2023-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10124212/ /pubmed/37080617 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066070 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Paediatrics
Mitchell, Tracy Karen
Hall, Nigel J
Yardley, Iain
Cole, Christina
Hardy, Pollyanna
King, Andy
Murray, David
Nuthall, Elizabeth
Roehr, Charles
Stanbury, Kayleigh
Williams, Rachel
Pearce, John
Woolfall, Kerry
Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
title Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
title_full Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
title_fullStr Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
title_full_unstemmed Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
title_short Mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
title_sort mixed-methods feasibility study to inform a randomised controlled trial of proton pump inhibitors to reduce strictures following neonatal surgery for oesophageal atresia
topic Paediatrics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124212/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37080617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066070
work_keys_str_mv AT mitchelltracykaren mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT hallnigelj mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT yardleyiain mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT colechristina mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT hardypollyanna mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT kingandy mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT murraydavid mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT nuthallelizabeth mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT roehrcharles mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT stanburykayleigh mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT williamsrachel mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT pearcejohn mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia
AT woolfallkerry mixedmethodsfeasibilitystudytoinformarandomisedcontrolledtrialofprotonpumpinhibitorstoreducestricturesfollowingneonatalsurgeryforoesophagealatresia