Overweight and Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
PErioperAtive CHildhood obesitY (PEACHY): A Prospective Observational Cohort Study Investigating the Proportion of Overweight and Obese Children Presenting for a Procedure Under General Anaesthesia in the UK and the Incidence of Perioperative Adverse Outcomes in This Patient Group
The incidence of childhood obesity is at epidemic levels and increasing in the UK. Obese
adults are considered a high-risk group of patients for general anaesthesia with published
national guidelines on the best practice management. The proportion of children presenting
for a procedure under general anaesthesia in the UK who are overweight or obese is currently
unknown.
Obese children are perceived to be at greater risk of complications from general anaesthesia.
Previous non-UK studies suggest they take longer to recover from anaesthesia, require more
medications to combat nausea and vomiting and are at greater risk of complications that may
threaten their airway and breathing.
This study involves reviewing the anaesthetic care record and patient notes to collect
information relating to general anaesthesia and basic demographic data in children aged 2-16
years presenting for a procedure under general anaesthesia.
The aims of this study are to establish the prevalence of obesity in the paediatric surgical
population (i.e. the proportion of children attending UK hospitals for procedures under
general anaesthesia who are overweight or obese) and to ascertain whether obese children are
at increased risk compared to their healthy weight counterparts.
This information will be used with the goal of reducing avoidable harm both at national and
local level in the future.
IRAS 248493 REC 18/WM/0394 NIHR CPMS ID 40368
Hypotheses
1. Overweight and obese children commonly present for procedures under general anaesthesia.
2. Obese children are at higher risk of perioperative adverse events compared to their
healthy-weight counterparts.
3. There is wide variation in paracetamol drug dosing amongst obese children.
4. Obese children may be more likely to present for certain surgery compared to their
healthy-weight counterparts.
This observational cohort study will take place in NHS hospitals in the UK with trainee
anaesthetists affiliated to the Paediatric Anaesthesia Trainee Research Network (PATRN). To
increase coverage of sites in the UK, the project will be advertised through other trainee
research networks including Research and Audit Federation of Trainees (RAFT) and through the
Association of Paediatric Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland (APAGBI) linkmen.
Each hospital taking part will have a nominated anaesthetic consultant and trainees who will
act as local investigators collecting data. Data will be collected for all children aged 2-16
years weighing >12kg presenting for a procedure involving general anaesthesia during the
defined study period. This will be one week (7 consecutive days). Using previous PATRN audit
projects as a guide, we aim to enrol approximately 90 local sites which will give an
estimated total of 7590 children attending for a procedure under general anaesthesia during
the study period.
Patients will be identified by local trainee investigators (independent of delivery of
anaesthesia but part of the anaesthetic department of the hospital) from operating department
lists on the days of the study. Data will be collected on all eligible patients who undergo a
procedure under general anaesthesia during the study period. Similar data collection tools
have been used in previous PATRN audit projects.
Data will be collected from the paper or electronic anaesthetic record and clinical notes.
Only routine clinical data will be included and where this is unavailable the domain will be
left blank. Data will be collected using a single paper case report form (CRF) per patient.
This will be initiated by the anaesthetist in the operating theatre and completed by recovery
staff in PACU. Patient identifiable data in the form of hospital number and date of birth
will be collected on the CRF for traceability in terms of missing data.
To calculate BMI, age (to the nearest month), gender, height and weight are required for each
patient. It is anticipated that all hospitals would routinely measure weight but some
hospitals may not routinely measure height prior to a procedure under general anaesthesia.
NICE guidelines currently recommend that clinical judgement should be used to decide when to
measure a person's height and weight, including at routine health checks. The preoperative
setting is a specific health check prior to undergoing general anaesthesia and therefore an
appropriate time to measure a child's height and weight.
Height will be measured with shoes removed to the nearest 0.1cm using a height measure with
the child's head positioned so that the Frankfurt plane is horizontal. Body weight will be
measured with patients lightly clad, to the nearest 0.1kg using a calibrated electronic
weighing scale. If the local site is unable to collect age, gender, height and weight we will
ask for the case to be logged and uploaded but for no other data to be collected. It is
important to know how many cases we are unable to include in the analysis due to incomplete
data.
Other information that would routinely be recorded within the clinical notes relating to the
patients physical status, surgery, anaesthetic and specific perioperative adverse events will
also be collected on the CRF.
The completed CRF will be taken directly to a secure location accessible by the local
investigator. The data will be entered electronically via a secure encrypted connection into
an online portal managed by Aberdeen University. The software used for data capture will be
REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture - http://www.project-redcap.org). REDCap is a
mature, secure web application for building and managing online surveys and databases.
Each dataset entered will generate a unique identifier (ie the data will be pseudonymised);
local investigators will be asked to keep a log of their unique identifiers linked to local
hospital identification numbers. The hospital number will remain within the respective
trusts, meaning only the local NHS staff responsible for care have access to personal
identifying information. The study database will be closed for data entry a number of weeks
after the study completion date. The anonymised responses from participating hospitals across
the country will be analysed by a team of researchers.
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