Trauma Clinical Trial
— GRIPOfficial title:
A Multicentre Observational Case-controlled Feasibility Study: In Children Who Ride Bikes or Scooters, is the Risk of Sustaining a Serious Injury Greater When Metal Handlebar Ends Are Exposed Than When They Are Covered by Intact Grips?
Cycling injuries are the 3rd most common mechanism of injury in 7-13 year olds[1]. Bicycle
injuries have remained one of the commonest causes of paediatric abdominal trauma for over
60 years[2,3]. 15% of child cyclist injuries involve impact with a handlebar; two-thirds of
those are abdominal injuries[4]. Handlebar impact is now the commonest mechanism of major
paediatric abdominal injury[3]. Serious handlebar injuries often occur after apparently
minor falls; they are not unique to riders performing stunts[5].
One small study found that the metal handlebar ends were often exposed on bikes of children
sustaining severe abdominal injuries[6]. Most European safety standards do not test grip
durability[7-10]. Day-to-day use can damage rubber grips, exposing the underlying metal
handlebar tube.
This feasibility study aims to test the research methods that will be used in a subsequent
nationwide multicentre study. The main study will investigate the association between
injuries and handlebar grip condition.
Children attending study hospitals with any bicycle or kick scooter injury will be invited
to participate. Parents of injured children will be invited to complete questionnaires
regarding circumstances surrounding the injury and condition of the handlebar ends on the
bike or scooter involved. Clinical information regarding the injury will also be collected.
The handlebar end condition will be compared between children sustaining a handlebar end
injury [Cases] and riders whose injury did not involve the handlebar [Controls].
If exposed handlebar ends are more prevalent amongst riders with handlebar end injuries,
injury prevention strategies can focus on methods to prevent damage occurring to grips
through day-to-day use. If no such association is found, prevention strategies can be
focused elsewhere, such as on design of effective protective clothing.
Data collection for this feasibility study will occur between March 2015 and September 2015.
The Chief Investigator, Mr. Andrew Neilson, funds the feasibility study.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | October 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | September 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | N/A to 15 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Children 0-15 years inclusive - Presenting to either of the study hospitals for assessment or treatment - Sustained an injury or suspected to have sustained an injury (i.e. AIS >=0) - Due to an incident involving any non-motorized bicycle, tricycle or kick scooter Exclusion Criteria: - Incidents where the injured child was involved in a motor vehicle collision - Incidents where the injured child was injured by another rider (e.g. injured child run over by a cyclist) - Incidents involving a bicycle fitted with 'bull bars' - Patients for whom neither parent / guardian is fluent in English (if the history is clear from a parent, the patient will be eligible for inclusion) - If an eligible patient is dead on arrival the family will not be invited to participate, and they will not subsequently be contacted - If an eligible patient dies during their admission, they will be withdrawn from further involvement in the study and the family will not be contacted |
Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Andrew Neilson | University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, University of Oxford |
Acton CH, Thomas S, Clark R, Pitt WR, Nixon JW, Leditschke JF. Bicycle incidents in children--abdominal trauma and handlebars. Med J Aust. 1994 Mar 21;160(6):344-6. — View Citation
Acton CH, Thomas S, Nixon JW, Clark R, Pitt WR, Battistutta D. Children and bicycles: what is really happening? Studies of fatal and non-fatal bicycle injury. Inj Prev. 1995 Jun;1(2):86-91. — View Citation
Bergqvist D, Hedelin H, Lindblad B, Mätzsch T. Abdominal injuries in children: an analysis of 348 cases. Injury. 1985 Jan;16(4):217-20. — View Citation
Bohmer JH, Proust AF. Adult bicycle handlebar injury. Am J Emerg Med. 2006 Sep;24(5):624-5. — View Citation
BSI. BS EN 14619:2005. Roller sports equipment and kick scooters: Safety requirements and test methods. British Standards Institution; 2005.
BSI. BS EN 14766:2005. Mountain bicycles: Safety requirements and test methods. British Standards Institution; 2006.
BSI. BS EN 16054:2012. BMX bicycles: Safety requirements and test methods. British Standards Institution; 2012.
BSI. BS EN ISO 8098:2014. Cycles. Safety requirements for bicycles for young children. British Standards Institution; 2014.
EuroSafe, Injury Database, European Commission, Swansea University, KFV. Injuries in the European Union, Issue 4. Summary of injury statistics for the years 2008-2010. European Association for Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion (EuroSafe); 2013.
Getting to grips with handlebar injuries: a call for collaboration to inform legislative change. British Association of Paediatric Surgeons Annual Congress, Bournemouth 2013.
Nataraja RM, Palmer CS, Arul GS, Bevan C, Crameri J. The full spectrum of handlebar injuries in children: a decade of experience. Injury. 2014 Apr;45(4):684-9. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2013.07.022. Epub 2013 Dec 8. — View Citation
Nehoda H, Hochleitner BW. Subcapsular liver haematomas caused by bar ends in mountain-bike crashes. Lancet. 1998 Jan 31;351(9099):342. — View Citation
Neofytou K, Michailidou M, Petrou A, Loizou S, Andreou C, Pedonomou M. Isolated jejunal perforation following bicycle handlebar injury in adults: a case report. Case Rep Emerg Med. 2013;2013:678678. doi: 10.1155/2013/678678. Epub 2013 Aug 5. — View Citation
Tracy ET, Englum BR, Barbas AS, Foley C, Rice HE, Shapiro ML. Pediatric injury patterns by year of age. J Pediatr Surg. 2013 Jun;48(6):1384-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2013.03.041. — View Citation
Winston FK, Shaw KN, Kreshak AA, Schwarz DF, Gallagher PR, Cnaan A. Hidden spears: handlebars as injury hazards to children. Pediatrics. 1998 Sep;102(3 Pt 1):596-601. — View Citation
Winston FK, Weiss HB, Nance ML, Vivarelli-O'Neill C, Strotmeyer S, Lawrence BA, Miller TR. Estimates of the incidence and costs associated with handlebar-related injuries in children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2002 Sep;156(9):922-8. — View Citation
* Note: There are 16 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Number of Cases & Controls | The total number of eligible Cases & Controls identified in each department. | 6 months | No |
Other | Recruitment | The number identified by recruitment step 1a, 1b and 1c. Number recruited by reminder letters. Number of recruited participants who are eligible. Number completing questionnaire Part 2 without need for reminder. Number who respond to SMS, email, telephone or postal reminders for questionnaire Part 2. Proportion of responses to questionnaire Part 2 completed online versus using paper questionnaire. Proportion of incomplete versus complete questionnaire datasets. Number invited to participate in a telephone interview (Part 3). Number consenting to that interview; qualitative reasons for non-participation. Number completing that interview. |
6 months | No |
Other | Study acceptability | Qualitative feedback from participants about the acceptability and design of the study. Qualitative feedback from recruiters about their willingness to recruit potential participants, the acceptability and design of the study. |
6 months | No |
Other | Use of photographs | What proportion upload photos of their handlebar ends using the online form. What proportion of those using the paper questionnaire Part 2 email photos. Can an investigator grade handlebar condition using photos submitted by participants? If so, what is the inter-observer agreement between the parent's assessment and that of the investigator using the photograph. |
6 months | No |
Other | Design & resources | Assess and record where possible the workload and resources required in each department. Record staff questions to aid compilation of an FAQ document for the national study. |
6 months | No |
Primary | Feasibility | To demonstrate the feasibility of a study researching whether or not exposed handlebar ends are a risk factor for injury in child bike and scooter riders. | 6 months | No |
Secondary | Research methodology | To test the research methodology proposed for a future nationwide multicentre study. | 6 months | No |
Secondary | Power calculation data collection | To collect data required to do power calculations for a future nationwide multi centre study: The percentage of riders who did impact the handlebar end. The ratio of recruited Cases to Controls. The percentage who don't know whether they impacted the handlebar end. The percentage who don't know which handlebar end they hit. The proportion of intact, damaged and exposed handlebar ends in each group. The percentage whose handlebar ends are both in the same condition. |
6 months | No |
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