Consensus demonstrates four indicators needed to standardise burn wound infection reporting across trials in a single country study (The ICon-B Study)

2020 
SUMMARY Introduction Evidence-based interventions are needed to treat burn wound infection (BWI). Evidence syntheses have been limited by heterogeneity of indicators used to report BWI across trials. Consistent reporting of BWI would be facilitated by an agreed minimum set of indicators. The Infection Consensus in Burns study aimed to achieve expert consensus about a Core Indicator Set (CIS) for BWI. Methods The CIS was established through development of a long-list of BWI indicators identified from a systematic review and expert input. In a Delphi survey, UK expert participants rated the indicators according to use in everyday practice, importance for diagnosis and frequency of observation in patients with BWI. Indicators were included in the CIS if > 75% of participants agreed it was important for diagnosis and used in everyday practice, and > 50% rated it as frequently observed in patients with BWI. Results 195 indicators were identified from the systematic review and reduced to 29 survey items through merging of items with the same meaning. Seventy-five UK experts participated in the Delphi survey. Following a single survey round and a consensus meeting with an expert panel, four items were included in the CIS: pyrexia, spreading erythema, change in white cell count, and presence of pathogenic microbes. Discussion and conclusions To facilitate evidence synthesis, a single country systematic, expert-informed approach was taken to develop a core set of indicators (CIS) to be reported consistently across trials reporting BWI as an outcome. Future work requires verification of the CIS with international experts.
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